Land & Development Real Estate Pennsylvania Statewide
2/25/2026
How Developers Calculate Land Residual Value in the Lehigh Valley
A Seller’s Guide to Understanding What Your Land Is Really Worth to a Builder
Introduction: Developers Don’t “Guess” at Land Value
One of the biggest misconceptions among landowners in the Lehigh Valley is this:
“My land must be worth X because similar acreage sold for X.”
That is not how developers think. Developers do not start with what land should be worth. They start with what the finished project will be worth — and then work backward. That process is called Land Residual Valuation.
If you own land near:
Understanding residual valuation is critical — because it explains why:
Let’s break down exactly how this works.
Step 1: Developers Start With the End Value (Gross Project Value)
Every developer begins with a simple question:
This depends on the asset class.
Industrial Example (I-78 Corridor)
That is the projected finished value.
But that does NOT mean the land is worth $65M divided by acreage.
Now the subtraction begins.
Step 2: Subtract Construction & Development Costs
Industrial construction (modern high-clear distribution) in the Lehigh Valley:
Approximate hard costs: $80–$110 per SF depending on complexity
Now subtract soft costs:
Soft costs often equal 10–20% of hard costs.
Total development cost so far: $54,500,000
Step 3: Subtract Financing & Carry Costs
Interest, construction loan fees, carrying land during approvals could add another: $3M–$6M depending on timeline.
Total now: $59,500,000
Step 4: Developer Profit Requirement
Developers require a margin — typically: 15%–25% of total project value depending on risk.
Add that to total costs: $59,500,000 + $11,700,000 = $71,200,000
But remember — the stabilized value was only $65,000,000. This means the project only works if costs stay below $53.3M (to leave room for profit).
So land must fit inside that structure.
Step 5: What’s Left for Land?
The project doesn’t work. Land must be priced lower.
Let’s adjust numbers:
That leaves: $2,000,000 for land.
If the site is 20 acres: Land value = $100,000 per acre. That may shock a landowner near I-78 — but this is how residual math works.
Why Interchange Land Sells for $1M+ Per Acre
Now let’s run a different scenario.
Smaller 150,000 SF industrial building:
Residual math may allow:
Scale changes everything.
Multifamily Residual Example (Allentown / Bethlehem)
Assume:
Now you’re at $50M.
Land must fit inside that equation — typically 10–20% of total value.
That means:
If zoning only allows 120 units instead of 200, land value drops dramatically.
Density drives residual.
Key Factors That Change Residual Value in the Lehigh Valley
1?? Sewer Availability
This is why sewer-served transitional farmland commands premium pricing.
2?? Warehouse Pushback
If approvals take 24 months instead of 12:
That reduces what developers can pay for land.
Political risk directly impacts residual value.
3?? Site Work Complexity
All subtract from land value.
4?? Absorption Risk In 2021–2022:
Spec warehouses absorbed quickly.
In 2026–2030: Industrial normalization means:
Why Tax Assessment Is Irrelevant
County assessment is not tied to development economics.
A parcel assessed at $1M could be worth:
Assessment is not a valuation metric in development underwriting.
Residual math is.
Why Assemblage Changes Everything
If your 15 acres combine with a neighbor’s 25 acres:
Assemblage often increases residual land value per acre.
Why Smaller, Entitled Sites Sometimes Win
In today’s Lehigh Valley:
Mid-size industrial (100K–250K SF):
Developers may pay more per acre for smaller, shovel-ready parcels.
What Sellers Should Do Before Pricing Land
Land should be priced according to its most realistic highest & best use — not its aspirational use.
The 2026–2035 Lehigh Valley Residual Reality Industrial:
Still strong but selective.
Political risk must be priced in.
Limited value without it.
Final Advisory Perspective
Developers do not pay based on acreage alone.
They pay based on:
...equals land.
That is residual valuation.
If you understand that equation, you understand:
Land value is not emotional. It is mathematical.
And in the Lehigh Valley’s second phase of growth, math matters more than ever.