Is Your Lehigh Valley Land Transitional?

2/24/2026

Is Your Lehigh Valley Land Transitional? 

A Seller’s Strategic Guide to Understanding Development Value (2026–2035)

 

Introduction: The Most Important Question a Landowner Can Ask

If you own land in the Lehigh Valley today — whether it’s farmland, open acreage, legacy industrial property, or underutilized commercial land — the most important question isn’t:

“What is my land worth?” 

The real question is:

“Is my land transitional?”

Because transitional land — land that is moving from one use category to a higher and better use — is where the greatest value creation occurs.

The Lehigh Valley is now in a second phase of growth. Industrial expansion, residential demand, infrastructure expansion, and zoning reform are reshaping what land is worth — and why.

Some properties are sitting quietly in the path of growth. Others look close to development activity — but will never transition due to utilities, politics, or geography.

This guide will help you determine which category your property falls into.

 

What Does “Transitional Land” Actually Mean?

Transitional land is property that:

  • Is not yet developed
  • Is not yet entitled for higher density
  • Is currently valued based on its existing use

But is positioned to support a more intensive use in the near to mid-term

Examples:

  • Farmland near an I-78 interchange
  • Agricultural acreage near Route 33 expansion
  • Commercial frontage in a residential growth corridor
  • Older industrial parcels ripe for redevelopment
  • Low-density zoning in a township facing housing shortages

The value difference between “current use” and “future use” can be significant — but only if transition is feasible.

 

Step 1: Is Your Property in the Path of Growth?

The Lehigh Valley has very clear growth corridors.

Primary Growth Engines

  • I-78 Corridor (Upper & Lower Macungie, Bethlehem Township)
  • Route 33 Corridor (Nazareth, Palmer, Forks)
  • Route 22 Retail Spine
  • I-476 Southern Lehigh Expansion
  • Medical growth zones (St. Luke’s, LVHN corridors)

If your land is:

  • Within 1–2 miles of a major interchange
  • Near expanding subdivisions
  • Adjacent to utility extensions
  • Near healthcare or industrial expansion

It may be transitional.

If your property is:

  • Deep interior agricultural land without sewer
  • Far from major corridors
  • Outside planned growth areas
  • In a township aggressively restricting development

Transition potential may be limited.

 

Step 2: Utilities — The True Gatekeeper

In today’s Lehigh Valley, sewer access often determines whether land transitions — not just location. Ask:

  • Is public sewer available?
  • Is capacity confirmed?
  • Is water available?
  • Is there existing industrial electric infrastructure?

Without utilities, even prime location land may remain agricultural.

With utilities, value changes immediately.

 

Step 3: Zoning Reality vs. Zoning Potential

Many landowners assume zoning is fixed. It isn’t.

However, zoning change has become more politically sensitive — especially for warehouses.

You must evaluate:

  • Current zoning classification
  • Adjacent zoning
  • Comprehensive plan guidance
  • Warehouse overlay restrictions
  • Height limitations
  • Buffer requirements

Industrial zoning near I-78 may command $900K–$1.8M per acre.

Agricultural land one mile away may trade at $150K–$350K per acre — unless rezoning is realistic.

Understanding political climate is critical.

 

Step 4: Political Climate & Warehouse Pushback

The Lehigh Valley has experienced significant community resistance to large-scale warehouse development.

Municipalities seeing the most pushback include:

  • Upper Macungie
  • Lower Macungie
  • Bethlehem Township
  • Palmer Township
  • Forks Township

If your land’s transitional value depends on mega-warehouse use, entitlement risk must be underwritten carefully.

However: Smaller industrial buildings, flex parks, and residential uses face less resistance.

Understanding what will get approved matters more than theoretical zoning.

 

Step 5: Residential Spillover = Commercial Transition

Many landowners overlook residential growth as a transition trigger.

When subdivisions expand:

  • Retail follows.
  • Medical follows.
  • Service commercial follows.

If your land is near:

  • New townhome communities
  • 55+ housing
  • Subdivision expansion
  • School district growth

It may transition from low-intensity commercial or farmland to higher-value commercial.

Residential-driven transitional land is often less politically contentious than industrial-driven land.

 

Step 6: Corridor-by-Corridor Transitional Potential

I-78 Corridor

  • Highest land values.
  • Highest entitlement scrutiny.
  • Strongest industrial demand. 

Transitional land near interchanges remains valuable — but zoning risk is real.

Route 33 Corridor

  • Still growing.
  • Less saturated than I-78.
  • Industrial + residential hybrid growth.

Transitional land here may represent better risk-adjusted opportunity. 

Route 22 Corridor

  • Mature.
  • Best opportunity is redevelopment.

Older commercial repositioning more viable than raw land conversion.

Southern Lehigh / I-476 Influence

  • Residential expansion zone.
  • Townhome and commuter growth.
  • Selective commercial infill.

Transitional farmland near utilities here may become valuable for housing.

 

Step 7: Pricing Snapshot (2026 Advisory Ranges)

  • Industrial-Zoned, Utility-Served Land: $800,000 – $1.8M per acre (prime corridor)
  • Transitional Farmland Near Interchange: $250,000 – $600,000 per acre (dependent on rezoning viability)
  • Sewer-Served Residential Raw Land: $150,000 – $350,000 per acre
  • Interior Agricultural Land Without Utilities: $50,000 – $150,000 per acre
  • Redevelopment Commercial Parcels: Highly location dependent — often valued based on income potential, not acreage.

The difference between $100,000 per acre and $1,000,000 per acre often comes down to utilities and entitlement.

 

When Is Land NOT Transitional?

Your property may not be transitional if:

  • Sewer extension is unlikely
  • Political climate strongly opposes use change
  • Access limitations prevent commercial curb cuts
  • Floodplain/wetlands severely limit buildable area
  • It is outside planned growth zones
  • Surrounding land use is permanently agricultural

Not every property near a highway becomes development land.

 

Should You Entitle Before Selling?

This depends on:

  • Your risk tolerance
  • Your capital position
  • Political complexity
  • Timeline flexibility

Preliminary approvals can:

  • Increase value significantly — if realistic.
  • Or waste time and money — if political support is weak.

A feasibility analysis before pursuing entitlement is essential.

 

Warning Signs You Are Leaving Money on the Table

  • You are pricing land based on tax assessment
  • You are marketing only to residential buyers
  • You are unaware of zoning flexibility
  • You have not evaluated sewer capacity
  • You assume warehouse pushback eliminates all industrial value
  • You have not considered phased sale structures

Transitional land requires strategic marketing.

 

Strategic Seller Positioning Checklist

If you believe your land is transitional:

  • Obtain zoning review
  • Confirm utility capacity
  • Understand comprehensive plan direction
  • Evaluate adjacent development
  • Analyze absorption trends
  • Consider assemblage potential
  • Identify most realistic highest & best use
  • Prepare infrastructure feasibility summary

Developers pay for clarity and confidence.

 

The 2026–2035 Transitional Window

The Lehigh Valley remains strong.

However:

  • Political scrutiny is rising
  • Agricultural preservation momentum is growing
  • Entitlement timelines are lengthening

If your land sits in a clear growth corridor with utilities nearby, the next 3–7 years may represent your strongest transition window.

Waiting indefinitely may expose you to:

  • Zoning restrictions
  • Downzoning risk
  • Infrastructure constraints
  • Market saturation

 

Final Advisory Perspective

Transitional land is not about speculation. It is about timing, infrastructure, zoning, and political viability.

The most valuable Lehigh Valley land today is:

  • Near infrastructure
  • Within planned growth areas
  • Politically feasible
  • Appropriately scaled
  • Supported by real demand

If you own land in Lehigh or Northampton County and are unsure whether it is transitional, the correct first step is not listing it. It is strategic evaluation.

Because in Phase Two of Lehigh Valley growth, only certain land transitions — and those properties command premium pricing.