How to Create Competition Among Land Buyers

3/20/2026

How to Create Competition Among Land Buyers

The Strategy Behind Selling Land for Maximum Value in Pennsylvania

If there’s one principle that consistently drives higher land prices, it’s this:

Competition increases value.

The difference between:

  • one interested buyer
  • and multiple competing buyers

can mean the difference between: 

  • an average sale price
  • and a premium, top-of-market result

The reality is:

Land doesn’t automatically attract competition — it must be strategically positioned to create it.

 

Why Most Land Sales Lack Competition

Most Pennsylvania landowners experience:

  • limited inquiries
  • long time on market
  • few or no competing offers

This typically happens because:

  • the property is marketed too broadly (or too narrowly)
  • the wrong buyer pool is targeted
  • the development potential is not clearly communicated
  • pricing is misaligned

In many cases, the issue isn’t the property — it’s the strategy.

 

Step 1: Identify the Highest and Best Use

Before marketing begins, the most important question is:

Who is the ideal buyer for this property?

This depends entirely on:

  • zoning
  • location
  • utilities
  • surrounding development

 

Example Buyer Types

  • homebuilders (subdivision land)
  • industrial developers (warehouse sites)
  • retail developers (corner parcels)
  • investors (hold or income strategy)
  • recreational buyers (rural land)

Competition only happens when the right buyers are targeted.

 

Step 2: Package the Property Like a Development Opportunity 

Raw land is difficult to evaluate. Well-packaged land creates clarity — and confidence.

Effective marketing packages include:

  • aerial maps and boundary overlays
  • zoning summaries
  • utility availability
  • conceptual site plans
  • yield analysis (lot count, square footage, etc.)

The goal is simple:

Make it easy for buyers to visualize the opportunity.

 

Step 3: Price Strategically — Not Emotionally

Pricing is one of the most powerful tools for creating competition.

 

Two Common Mistakes

  • Overpricing
  • discourages interest
  • reduces showings
  • eliminates competition

Underpricing without strategy

  • leaves money on the table

 

Strategic Pricing Approach

  • price at or slightly below market to attract attention
  • create urgency among buyers
  • allow competition to drive price upward

The best outcomes often come from multiple buyers competing — not one buyer negotiating.

 

Step 4: Control the Timing of Offers

Creating competition requires structure.

Instead of accepting the first offer: 

  • Set expectations for a defined marketing period

Examples: 

  • “All offers will be reviewed after X weeks”
  • “Best and final offers requested by X date”

This:

  • allows multiple buyers to engage
  • creates urgency
  • encourages stronger offers

 

Step 5: Target Buyers Directly (Not Just MLS)

Most land is marketed passively.

High-performing land sales use targeted outreach.

This includes:

  • contacting active developers
  • reaching regional and national buyers
  • leveraging industry relationships
  • marketing on specialized land platforms

The best buyers are often not browsing MLS daily — they must be reached directly.

 

Step 6: Create Scarcity and Urgency

Buyers act when they believe:

  • they might lose the opportunity

You can create this by:

  • setting offer deadlines
  • communicating multiple interested parties
  • highlighting limited availability
  • emphasizing development potential

 

Step 7: Negotiate From a Position of Strength

When multiple buyers are involved:

  • price increases
  • terms improve
  • contingencies may be reduced

You gain the ability to:

  • compare offers
  • select the best overall deal (not just price)
  • push for stronger terms

Competition shifts control from the buyer to the seller.

 

Real-World Examples

 

Scenario A: No Competition

  • one buyer
  • negotiates aggressively
  • extended due diligence
  • discounted price

 

Scenario B: Competitive Process

  • multiple interested buyers
  • defined offer deadline
  • competing bids

Result:

  • higher price
  • stronger terms
  • faster decision-making

 

What Types of Land Create the Most Competition?

Some property types naturally attract more buyers:

land near highway interchanges

parcels with public water and sewer

sites in growth corridors

infill development sites

properties with flexible zoning

However, even less obvious properties can generate competition with the right strategy.

 

Common Seller Mistakes

 

1. Taking the First Offer Too Quickly

You may never know what others would have paid.

 

2. Failing to Market to Developers

Developers often pay the highest prices.

 

3. Not Understanding Development Potential

This limits buyer interest and pricing.

 

4. Poor Presentation

Unclear or incomplete information reduces confidence.

 

Advisory Perspective: How I Create Competition for Sellers

When representing landowners, my focus is:

  • identifying the highest-value buyer pool
  • packaging the opportunity clearly
  • reaching targeted buyers directly
  • structuring the process to encourage multiple offers

 

The goal is not just to sell:

It’s to create an environment where buyers compete.

 

Final Thoughts: Competition Is Not Luck — It’s Strategy

In Pennsylvania land sales, the highest prices are rarely achieved by chance.

They are created through:

  • positioning
  • targeting
  • timing
  • and execution

If your property attracts only one buyer, you are negotiating.

If your property attracts multiple buyers:

you are in control.

 

Call to Action

If you want to create competition for your land:

  • I can identify the most likely buyer groups
  • position your property for maximum exposure
  • and structure a process that drives multiple offers

Because in land:

The best price doesn’t come from one buyer — it comes from competition.