May is National Beef Month and We’re Celebrating Our Midwest States

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthMay 1, 2026

May is National Beef Month and we’re celebrating our top ranked Midwest states: Nebraska, South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota!

Join us in showing appreciation for the cattle ranchers who rise early each day to rustle up their herds and provide food for the world; the U.S. beef industry is still the largest in the world! See a complete list of all U.S. states:May is National Beef Month and we’re celebrating our top ranked Midwest states: Nebraska, South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota!

Join us in showing appreciation for the cattle ranchers who rise early each day to rustle up their herds and provide food for the world; the U.S. beef industry is still the largest in the world! See a complete list of all U.S. states: U.S. Head of Cattle – January 1 2025 and 2026

Our top ranked Head of Cattle Midwest reporting states

Land Sales Bulletin: Bringing Clarity to Midwest Land Sales

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthApril 9, 2026

Across the Midwest, farmland is more than acreage—it is heritage, livelihood, and the foundation of rural communities. Yet despite its importance, reliable information about what land actually sells for can be surprisingly difficult to find. That’s where Land Sales Bulletin plays a vital role.

For more than three decades, Land Sales Bulletin (LSB) has served as one of the Midwest’s most trusted sources for rural land sales. In a region where agriculture shapes local economies, family legacies, and community identity, LSB provides something essential: accurate, timely, recorded county‑level land sale data. Our data provides a clear, factual picture of the land market—free from speculation, rumor, or inflated auction chatter.


What Land Sales Bulletin Does

LSB focuses exclusively on recorded land sales of 20 acres or more, across 10 core Midwest states: Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin, pulled directly from county courthouse records. This means:

  • No pending sales
  • No auction estimates
  • No unverifiable numbers

Just finalized, documented transactions that reflect real market activity.

Each sale includes county‑level detail—acres, price, land type, soil ratings, PINS, and buyer/seller information when available—giving farmers, landowners, brokers, lenders, appraisers, investors, and rural communities the transparency they need to make informed decisions.

Why This Matters to the Public

Even for residents who are not involved in agriculture, land sales influence daily life:

  • Local businesses depend on strong farm income.
  • Schools and infrastructure rely on stable property valuations.
  • Community planning requires understanding how land use is changing.
  • Economic development hinges on the health of rural land markets.

Accurate land‑sale reporting puts boots on the ground and helps ensure fairness, transparency, and informed decision‑making across the region.

The Human Story Behind Every Sale

Every land sale represents a turning point:

  • A retiring farmer passing land to the next generation
  • A young operator expanding to stay competitive
  • A family settling an estate
  • A community adjusting to new ownership

LSB’s role is to document these transitions with accuracy, timeliness and regard. By preserving the facts, LSB helps ensure that decisions—large and small—are grounded in facts.

Midwest Land Use: What the Data Shows

LSB’s 10 Midwest states remain among the most agriculturally productive in the nation.
According to the 2022 USDA Census of Agriculture:

  • Iowa leads the region with nearly 30 million acres of farmland.
  • Nebraska, Illinois, Minnesota, and South Dakota each maintain more than 20 million acres.
  • North Dakota remains heavily agricultural, dominated by row crops and small grains.
  • Michigan and Ohio have smaller totals but maintain diverse production bases.
  • Wisconsin continues to balance dairy, forage, and specialty crops.

Across the region, one trend is clear: fewer farms, larger operations, and continued consolidation. Iowa was the only state in the group to gain farms between 2017 and 2022; all others saw declines.

When combined, LSB states contain roughly 260 million acres of farmland—representing nearly 30% of all U.S. farmland. That concentration underscores the Midwest’s role as the core of U.S. food, feed, and fuel production.

How Land Sales Bulletin Supports the Region

LSB’s subscriptions provide:

  • Completed, documented land sales of 20+ acres
  • State and county‑level detail on actual recorded sale transactions
  • Historical back data for market trend analysis
  • Reliable benchmarks for appraisals, lending, and estate planning
  • Consistent reporting across 10 states that anchor American agriculture

Because nearly one‑third of U.S. farmland lies within these states, LSB’s reporting helps shape national understanding of land values and market trends.

What Sets Us Apart

Our strength lies in our hands-on analysis of land sales data by local Midwest-trained land sales data specialists. This expertise ensures every documented land sale transaction is carefully reviewed and contextualized, providing unparalleled insight into the true market dynamics of the region. Our specialists bring knowledge and experience, making our data not just accurate, but actionable for farmers, landowners, realtors, lenders, investors, and appraisers alike.

Additionally, Land Sales Bulletin distinguishes itself through its commitment to transparency and consistency. We source data exclusively from official county courthouse records, ensuring that every sale reported is a complete, documented transaction. This rigorous approach eliminates speculation and provides stakeholders with trustworthy, timely information. Our ongoing dedication to quality  makes us the Midwest’s most reliable land sales resource and choice for rural land sales data.

A Clearer Future for Midwest Land Markets

With rising farmland values, increasing investor participation, and ongoing consolidation, the need for transparent and documented land sale information has never been greater. Land Sales Bulletin is committed to delivering the clarity, consistency, and integrity Midwest rural real estate professionals rely on—supporting informed decisions and honoring the land and communities we serve.

Celebrating Compeer Financial’s Commitment to the Next Generation of Agriculture

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthApril 7, 2026

Across the Midwest, few organizations champion rural communities and future ag leaders as consistently as Compeer Financial. Their latest investment—awarding 35 Illinois high school seniors with $2,000 scholarships toward ag‑related degrees—is another powerful example of their long‑standing commitment to strengthening the agricultural pipeline.

These students represent the best of our rural communities: a collective 3.9 GPA, strong involvement in FFA and 4‑H, and a passion for fields ranging from plant and animal sciences to ag business and education. Compeer’s support extends beyond traditional rural areas, with dedicated scholarships for students from metropolitan counties who are pursuing agriculture‑related careers—an important step in expanding ag literacy and opportunity.

Since 2018, Compeer has provided nearly $1.75 million in scholarships to more than 1,000 students, reinforcing their belief that the future of agriculture depends on education, access, and community investment.

We’re proud to support and shine a spotlight on an organization that not only serves today’s producers but also invests deeply in tomorrow’s leaders. Learn more: agrinews-pubs.com

Minnesota Farmland Market Holds Steady as 2026 Outlook Improves

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthApril 1, 2026

Minnesota’s farmland market continues to demonstrate resilience heading into spring, supported by firmer commodity prices, USDA bridge payments, and improved grower sentiment. While demand isn’t at the peak levels seen from 2021–2023, values across the state remain steady, with recent sales showing strong productivity indexes and competitive per‑acre prices

As one of Land Sales Bulletin’s Midwest reporting states, Minnesota plays a key role in illustrating broader regional trends: moderated demand, lower sales volume compared to the boom years, and a market that continues to hold value despite higher interest rates and input cost uncertainty. With farmers entering the 2026 planting season facing more positives than negatives, Minnesota’s land market remains a steady anchor in the Midwest. Read more from Farm Progress: Demand for Minnesota farmland holds steady as outlooks improve

Minnesota land sales - Farm Progress

Midwest Farmland Market Snapshot

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthMarch 11, 2026

Farmland activity across our Midwest continues to demonstrate strength and resilience, with recent sales underscoring the diversity of land types and buyer demand across Land Sales Bulletin’s core reporting states.

Here’s a concise look at notable transactions featured in the latest Landwatch Weekly:

Indiana – A large 380‑acre Elkhart County farm sold for an average of $20,265/acre, with top tracts of productive tillable ground reaching $24,480/acre. Mixed timber‑tillable tracts followed closely behind.

Minnesota – Rock County cropland brought $17,000/acre across two tracts, supported by strong PLC yields and a productivity index above 96 — a clear indicator of continued appetite for top‑tier soils.

North Dakota – Ramsey County farmland sold for $1,975/acre, with tracts offering 63–68 PI soils and flexibility for spring wheat, peas, corn, soybeans, sunflowers, and canola. Values remain steady in regions where productivity varies but cropping diversity is strong.

Across the region, buyers remain focused on soil quality, crop versatility, and long‑term productivity, even as interest rates and input costs continue to shape bidding behavior.

Land Sales Bulletin provides confirmed, recorded sales across the Midwest — ensuring transparency, accuracy, and a clear view of real market movement. Read more about the highlighted sales from Progressive Farmer: https://conta.cc/4llHfoQ

Minnesota Farmland Market Shows Wide Variability

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthMarch 10, 2026

Our Midwest state of Minnesota’s farmland market remains a study in contrasts. Some sales are exceeding expectations, while others show signs of softening — and shifting buyer dynamics are playing a major role. Farmers accounted for 70% of Hertz Farm Management’s purchases in 2024, dropping to 58% in 2025 as investor activity increased.

Recent Federal Reserve data shows nonirrigated land values up 0.7% and pastureland up 12% in the 9th District, reflecting strong cattle markets. Strong A‑quality sales continue across Minnesota, with recent prices ranging from $9,779 to $12,916 per acre depending on county and CPI. Read more from Farm Progress: Strength of farmland market continues to vary across Minnesota

As always, Land Sales Bulletin’s timely, finalized land sale data across Minnesota and the broader Midwest provides essential transparency for understanding these trends and benchmarking local market performance: Midwest Land Sales Data

Minnesota land sales - Farm Progress

Are Farmland Values Leveling off Nationwide

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthFebruary 11, 2026

Farmland values across the Midwest are holding historically strong, even as the market shifts into a more balanced, disciplined phase. According to Farm Progress, our Midwest reporting states from Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, the Dakotas are seeing values stabilize near record highs, with buyers becoming more selective and quality-driven.
“Midwest farmland values remain historically strong heading into 2026” has been an encouraging and consistent headline. Our data reinforces this message: the market isn’t falling—it’s normalizing, with long‑term confidence and limited supply keeping values elevated. Read more from Farm Progress – Farmland values hold steady, reflect shift toward balanced market

Our upper Midwest reporting states farmland sales closed 2025 with strong momentum

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthFebruary 5, 2026

Farmland sales across our Upper Midwest reporting states closed 2025 with strong momentum, highlighted by a $18,000-per-acre sale in Moody County, South Dakota. Additional November sales in our reporting states of Minnesota and Nebraska underscored the broader strength of the row‑crop market.
Together, these sales show a market that remains resilient, selective, and driven by soil quality, location, and operational fit as buyers position for the 2026 crop year. Our trusted transactional land sales data can help demonstrate these patterns emerging throughout the Midwest. Read more from Successful FarmingSouth Dakota Farmland Sells for More Than $18,000 per Acre

South Dakota Farmland Sells for More Than $18,000 per Acre
South Dakota Farmland Sells for More Than $18,000 per Acre

Compeer Financial – 2026 Farmland Values Outlook

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthFebruary 3, 2026

Compeer Financial’s latest Appraisal Report episode unpacks how farmland values across our Midwest reporting states of southwestern Minnesota, northern Iowa, and eastern South Dakota continue to reflect long-term fundamentals rather than short-term commodity swings. Even with tighter crop margins, buyer demand for high-quality acres remains strong across our Midwest states. Watch or Read in their links below:

Watch: https://ow.ly/tz2v50Y5pfl

Read: https://ow.ly/UyrJ50Y5pfk