Land & Development Real Estate Pennsylvania Statewide
3/1/2026
Pennsylvania Land Values Explained: What Determines Price Per Acre?
A 2026 Statewide Guide for Landowners and Sellers
One of the most common questions landowners ask is:
“How much is land worth per acre in Pennsylvania?”
The honest answer is: It depends — dramatically.
Land in Pennsylvania can range from: $2,000 per acre for remote forestland to $2,000,000+ per acre for prime commercial highway frontage The difference isn’t acreage alone. It’s what can be done with that acreage.
In this guide, we break down what truly determines land values per acre in Pennsylvania, across residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, recreational, and transitional land.
The Biggest Misconception About Price Per Acre
Many landowners assume:
“All acres are equal.”
They are not.
Price per acre is influenced by:
An acre along I-78 near Allentown is not valued like an acre in rural Potter County.
The 10 Primary Drivers of Pennsylvania Land Value
1?? Location & Growth Corridors
Location is the foundation of land value.
High-value corridors in 2026 include:
Land near interchanges often commands premium pricing.
2?? Zoning
Zoning determines what is legally permissible.
Examples:
Zoning flexibility increases value. Restrictive zoning caps it.
3?? Sewer & Utilities
In Pennsylvania, sewer access is often the largest multiplier of land value.
Without sewer:
With sewer:
Sewer proximity can increase value 2–5x.
Water, electric capacity, and natural gas also matter — particularly for industrial land.
4?? Highest and Best Use
Land is worth what can be profitably built on it.
Developers calculate residual value:
Projected finished project value
= Land value
Highest and best use drives this math.
5?? Density & Yield
For residential land:
Density determines how many lots or units can be produced.
More yield often supports higher per-acre pricing.
6?? Topography & Buildability
Pennsylvania terrain varies widely.
Value decreases when land has:
Developers price based on buildable acreage — not total acreage.
7?? Access & Visibility
For commercial and industrial land:
Directly influence price per acre.
Retail land at signalized intersections commands premium pricing.
8?? Market Demand
Land value fluctuates based on:
Warehouse demand remains strong in logistics corridors.
Multifamily demand remains durable statewide.
Retail is more selective.
9?? Political & Entitlement Climate
In 2026, some Pennsylvania municipalities:
Entitlement risk affects land value. If approval is uncertain, developers reduce their offer.
?? Parcel Size & Assemblage Potential
Large tracts often trade differently than small parcels.
Assemblage potential can increase value.
Average Land Price Per Acre in Pennsylvania (2026 Ranges)
These are broad estimates and vary by region.
Agricultural Land
Recreational / Timber Land
Transitional Farmland Near Growth
Residential Development Land (Sewer-Served)
Industrial Land (Prime Corridors)
Commercial Highway Frontage
Each property must be individually evaluated.
Regional Differences Across Pennsylvania
Southeast PA
Lehigh Valley
Western PA
Central PA
Northern PA
Poconos
Location changes everything.
Why Tax Assessment Does Not Reflect Market Value
County tax assessments are:
Assessment may show: $10,000 per acre
Development feasibility may support: $150,000 per acre
Or vice versa.
Assessment is not a pricing guide.
Common Pricing Mistakes
Land pricing requires strategic modeling.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is 1 acre worth in Pennsylvania?
Anywhere from $2,000 to over $2,000,000 depending on location, zoning, utilities, and use.
What increases land value the most?
Sewer access, density potential, highway proximity, zoning flexibility.
Is now a good time to sell land in PA?
In growth corridors, yes. Timing depends on interest rates and entitlement climate.
Do developers pay per acre or per buildable acre?
Often per buildable acre or per approved unit yield.
2026–2035 Outlook for Pennsylvania Land Values
Final Advisory Perspective
Price per acre in Pennsylvania is not random.
It is determined by:
Before selling land in Pennsylvania, the most important question is not:
“How many acres do I have?”
It is:
“What can this land become?”
Because that determines what it is truly worth.