
We buy mountain and valley tracts, Piedmont parcels and Tidewater farmland and timber across Virginia for cash. Every sale closes through a licensed Virginia title company.
Reviewed June 2026 with 2025 USDA data
Virginia farm real estate averaged $6,100 an acre in 2025 (USDA NASS), and the state carries an effective property tax rate of about 0.87 percent (Tax Foundation). Idle Virginia land quietly costs money every year it sits, which is one reason many owners choose a direct cash sale over holding or listing.
| Average farm real estate value, 2025USDA NASS | $6,100 per acre |
|---|---|
| Virginia rank by land value | 3 of 48 states |
| Effective property tax rateTax Foundation | 0.87 percent |
| Annual property tax per $100,000 of value | about $870 |
| Typical direct sale closing | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Commission with a direct cash buyer | none, versus about 6 percent on a listing |
Virginia runs from the Appalachian coalfields and the Shenandoah Valley in the west, across the rolling Piedmont, to the Tidewater farmland and the Eastern Shore on the coast. Each region holds very different land.
We buy the valley and mountain tracts, the Piedmont acreage, and the coastal-plain farmland and timber, including the parcels that have sat unsold or that owners simply no longer use.

Three regions, three kinds of land. We buy across all of them.
Shenandoah, Rockingham, Augusta, Bath, Tazewell and Wise, valley farmland, mountain tracts and southwest coal country.
Bedford, Pittsylvania, Halifax, Charlotte and Buckingham, rolling rural acreage through the center of the state.
Accomack, Northampton and the coastal-plain counties, farmland and timber down to the bay and coast.

Virginia has its own rural land tax programs worth knowing when you sell.
Agricultural and forestal land in land-use carries a lower tax. Taking land out can trigger rollback taxes, which we factor into the offer.
Valley farmland, mountain tracts and coastal-plain timber each price differently. We research yours on its own terms.
Your sale closes through a licensed Virginia title company or settlement agent, with the deed recorded properly.
Whatever the land owes is settled through the closing, not out of your pocket.
An average is only a starting point. Your number comes from the parcel, not the state.
USDA puts Virginia farm real estate near $6,100 an acre, 19 of the 48 states it tracks.
Across 98 counties, from $2,612 an acre in Dickenson County up to $150,000 in Arlington County.
County, access and acreage. We price your exact parcel from recent comparable sales near it. See the Virginia price guide →
These counties have a page on the way. Wherever your land sits in Virginia, it is very likely one we buy in too.
Send the parcel, even just a county or parcel number. We research it, send a written offer, and close through a licensed Virginia title company.
Get my cash offer →The situations we see most from land owners in this state.
Sell a parcel from an estate, with all heirs.
We clear them at closing, before a tax sale.
Sell your Virginia land without traveling.
Real ranges by region and parcel type.
What Virginia land owners ask us most, with the local detail that matters.
Yes. Shenandoah Valley farmland and Blue Ridge and Appalachian recreational tracts are core parcels for us, including steep or wooded land that is slow to sell the usual way.
We factor it in. Land enrolled in agricultural or forestal land-use carries a lower tax, and taking it out can trigger rollback taxes. We account for your land's status up front.
Yes. Coastal-plain farmland, timber and rural acreage across the Tidewater and the Eastern Shore are all parcels we buy.
Yes. You sign from home and a licensed Virginia title company or settlement agent handles the deed and recording in state.
Virginia farm real estate averaged about $6,100 an acre in 2025, according to USDA NASS. Raw and recreational parcels usually trade below that average and cropland above it, so your acreage and land type set your real number.
Virginia has an effective property tax rate of about 0.87 percent (Tax Foundation), so land valued at $100,000 runs roughly $870 a year in property tax. Vacant land earns nothing while you hold it, which is one reason many owners choose to sell.
Answer a few quick questions, add a photo or plat if you have one, and we come back with a written, no obligation cash offer, usually within one working day.
A few quick steps. Parcel, size, location, a photo if you have one, then where to send the offer.