
We buy rural and recreational acreage, hunting land, farmland and vacant lots across Wisconsin, with or without road access. Cash, closed through a licensed, independent title company.
Reviewed June 2026 with 2025 USDA data
Wisconsin farm real estate averaged $6,420 an acre in 2025 (USDA NASS), and the state carries an effective property tax rate of about 1.61 percent (Tax Foundation). Idle Wisconsin 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 | $6,420 per acre |
|---|---|
| Wisconsin rank by land value | 1 of 48 states |
| Effective property tax rateTax Foundation | 1.61 percent |
| Annual property tax per $100,000 of value | about $1,610 |
| Typical direct sale closing | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Commission with a direct cash buyer | none, versus about 6 percent on a listing |
A lot of Wisconsin land is owned by people who never use it. Inherited acreage, a recreational tract that stopped getting visited, a lot bought years ago that never went anywhere. The taxes keep coming and the land just sits.
We buy raw acreage with no access, recreational and hunting tracts, farmland and pasture, and vacant lots, including the parcels that sat unsold with an agent. Location, access and acreage all get factored into a straight written offer.

An average is only a starting point. Your number comes from the parcel, not the state.
USDA puts Wisconsin farm real estate near $6,420 an acre, 17 of the 48 states it tracks.
Across 70 counties, from $2,812 an acre in Bayfield County up to $25,512 in Milwaukee County.
County, access and acreage. We price your exact parcel from recent comparable sales near it, then put it in a written offer. See Wisconsin in the price guide →

Three things decide how clean and fast a sale goes, and we handle all three.
Property taxes accrue on idle land every year you keep it. A clean sale ends that. Tired of the holding cost →
If the parcel is behind on taxes or carries a lien, we settle it from the sale proceeds, not your pocket. Land with back taxes →
Much Wisconsin land is owned from out of state. You sign from home and a licensed title company records the deed. Out of state owner →
Wherever your land sits in Wisconsin, across all 70 counties, it is very likely one we buy in.
What Wisconsin land owners ask us most, with the numbers that matter.
Recent USDA figures put the average value of farm real estate in Wisconsin at about $6,420 an acre, which ranks 17 of the 48 states USDA tracks. The average hides a wide local range. Across Wisconsin's 70 counties it runs from roughly $2,812 an acre in Bayfield County up to $25,512 in Milwaukee County. Your parcel's number comes down to its county, access and acreage, which is exactly what our written offer is based on.
Yes. Raw, remote acreage with no access, water or power is some of the most common land we buy, often bought years ago and never used. We price it for what it is and where it sits, then make a straight written offer.
Yes, and it is common. A lot of Wisconsin land is owned from out of state. The whole sale runs remotely: you sign from home and a licensed title company handles the deed and recording.
Usually, yes. If the parcel is behind on property taxes or carries a lien, we settle it at closing out of the sale proceeds rather than asking you to pay up front, as long as it is cleared before any tax sale.
Wisconsin farm real estate averaged about $6,420 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.
Wisconsin has an effective property tax rate of about 1.61 percent (Tax Foundation), so land valued at $100,000 runs roughly $1,610 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.