Land & Development Real Estate Pennsylvania Statewide
2/20/2026
How Conservation Easements Affect the Value of Your Pennsylvania Land
Across Pennsylvania, thousands of properties are subject to:
For many landowners, conservation easements represent:
But when it comes time to sell — or transfer land to the next generation — a critical question arises:
How does a conservation easement affect the value of my land?
The answer depends on the type of easement, the scope of restrictions, and the highest and best use of the property.
Let’s break it down.
What Is a Conservation Easement?
A conservation easement is a voluntary, legally binding agreement that permanently limits certain types of development or land use.
In Pennsylvania, common examples include:
When recorded, the easement “runs with the land,” meaning future owners must comply with its terms.
The Core Principle: Value Reflects Permitted Use
Real estate value is driven by highest and best use.
If land could otherwise be developed into:
...and an easement prohibits that development, the property’s development value is reduced or eliminated.
However — that does not mean the land has no value. It simply shifts into a different value category.
1. Agricultural Preservation Easements (Farmland Programs)
Pennsylvania’s agricultural conservation easement program has preserved hundreds of thousands of acres.
When farmland is enrolled:
How This Affects Value
Agricultural preservation generally:
In growth corridors, this can significantly reduce value relative to unrestricted transitional land.
However, preserved farms often command strong pricing among:
The value becomes agricultural — not developmental.
2. Land Trust Easements
Land trusts often craft customized easements that may:
Some easements allow:
The impact on value depends on:
A highly restrictive easement may significantly narrow the buyer pool.
3. Partial Restrictions: The Overlooked Middle Ground
Many Pennsylvania properties are partially restricted.
Examples include:
Restrictions are not always purely negative from a value perspective.
4. Conservation-Minded Owners: Value Beyond Price
Many landowners are not solely motivated by maximum sale price.
They care about:
For these owners, a conservation easement can:
The “value” may include:
In these cases, land value must be evaluated holistically.
5. Estate Planning Considerations
Conservation easements are often used in estate planning strategies.
Potential benefits include:
Before placing an easement — or before selling easement-encumbered land — it is important to fully understand long-term financial implications.
6. When Easements Can Increase Value
In certain markets, conservation can enhance value.
Examples:
Open space certainty In these cases, conservation becomes a feature — not a limitation.
7. What Developers Look At
When evaluating land with conservation easements, developers focus on:
Many landowners assume: “The land is preserved — so development is impossible.” That is not always true.
Some preserved properties allow:
The details matter.
8. The Risk of Misunderstanding Restrictions
One of the most common issues in Pennsylvania land transactions is misunderstanding easement language.
Mistakes include:
Every easement is unique. Professional review is critical before marketing.
Final Thought: Conservation Changes Value — It Doesn’t Eliminate It
A conservation easement does not automatically make land “worth less.”
It changes:
For conservation-minded owners and estate planners, the decision is rarely simple. It requires balancing:
In Pennsylvania, where growth corridors and preservation efforts often overlap, understanding how conservation easements affect land value is essential before making major decisions.
Because the goal isn’t simply protecting land. It’s protecting land intelligently — while understanding its full economic context.