Stable market

Land price Flevoland towards 120.000

23 May 2017 - Clarisse van der Woude - 31 comments

A striking transaction was concluded very recently on the Flevoland land market. A plot (less than 15 hectares) in eastern Flevoland has been sold at a record price of more than 125.000 euros.

Land pricing in the Flevopolders differs considerably from other agricultural areas in the Netherlands. In the most expensive region, the south of the Netherlands, an average of 66.700 euros is paid per hectare, in Flevoland it is several thousands of euros more.

Agricultural land usually goes for a price between 110.000 and 115.000 euros

110.000 to 115.000 euros
The current bottom in Flevoland is at 80.000 euros. This usually concerns parcels suitable for livestock farming. Most good agricultural land, however, will be sold for a price of 110.000 to 115.000 euros, according to a real estate agent from the region.

The really good lands, AM free, well drained and with neighbors who have farmed well sell for even more. Think of disease-free plots with a third of seed potatoes, a third of tulips and a third of lilies. Good organic soil can also count on a high price tag.

Exceptional transaction
Very recently there was an outlier. A transaction that amounted to more than 125.000 euros per hectare. An exception, because it concerned a small plot of lukewarm/warm arable land, close to a village center, which once used to be used for estates. Although there are currently no planning plans on the ground, this price cannot be seen as an agricultural price, according to the source. Buyers see the housing market pick up and expect that if they don't, at least the children will benefit from it later on.

The source describes the current land market in Flevoland as stable. Ground mobility is also low at the moment, but that suits the time of year. 

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Comments
31 comments
Flevo Farmer 23 May 2017
This is a response to this article:
[url=http://www.boerenbusiness.nl/ondernemen/grond/ artikel/10874610/grondprijs-flevoland-richting-de-120000][/url]
So the transaction was not for farmland? Storm in a milk glass for sure.
Dirk 23 May 2017
The photo above the article is from the Wieringermeer, Ooster Middenmeerweg to be precise. ;) ;p
when 23 May 2017
Are we heading towards hyperinflation? (starting to look like it!!!!)
welcome to the bubble pyramid game of the zionists
when 23 May 2017
would we be heading for hyperinflation after all (starting to look like it!!!)
welcome to the pyramid scheme of the zionists
Narcos 23 May 2017
Must be a special kind of farmers who buy land for these prices.?!!
proud farmer 23 May 2017
What a prize; for 120.000 euros you can already buy a beautiful house here above Dokkum!

And what about the fertile lands in the Carpathians in Romania. The black earth there costs about 5000 for a bunder.
meatball 23 May 2017
Proud farmer: do you want to be in the Carpathians? Not me.
and therefore the soil there costs nothing.
then pay more.
meatball 24 May 2017
that's not how it works there is not affordable you can't even get the land at 80.000 to earn a living on it with farmers let alone at these backward prices
Subscriber
boy 24 May 2017
120000 times 1.8% ! Land is also rented for that! and that sometimes goes to 3500 to 4000 euros
onion set 24 May 2017
a few weeks ago land was sold on flakkee for 130.000 about 10 ha of good land. lesser ground about
100.000 per hectare. so it's not that expensive yet.
Berry 24 May 2017
You will also have to take repayments into account. Especially with these low interest rates. 120000 over 30 years is 4000 euros per year to repay. But if you have a financier who does not want to see his money back.....
ground 24 May 2017
We can discuss it for a long time, but those who have bought land that was too expensive in the past have always done well.
Subscriber
pool boy 24 May 2017
Expensive, expensive it's a bargain. Look at the farmers who sold their land 15 years ago because it was so expensive. Bought a house, did some stock trading, new car, some money to the children. And the guilder-euro exchange over it. And it's all over.

I think that within 10 years the land price will be 250.000 per ha
hid 24 May 2017
So you think that the Netherlands will leave the European Union, and that land will therefore cost 250.000 guilders?
Berry 24 May 2017
The Netherlands out of the union means no more workers for intensive cultivation. This removes the basis for a high land price. Wheat, beets and potatoes then determine how much 1 ha is still worth
Subscriber
pool boy 24 May 2017
I think that soon the dairy farmer will go wild on the land market.
They have done nothing for years, and will have to have ground under their business to continue growing. We will lose the derogation, and eventually a LU per ha of max 2 pieces will be determined.

The organic farmers are earning so much money that they don't know what to do with the money anymore and they are going to scale up to meet the demand.

Due to the improving housing market, much will be developed and the project developer will come back on the market, which ensures rich farmers who want to buy land again.

The green madness continues and through large amounts of money the green geeks will want to buy more land to give their almost extinct meadow birds and their natural enemy the fox more space.

The money is worth less and less due to the endless pumping of money by the ECB, so that the euro will eventually be worth nothing and collapse.
Subscriber
boy 24 May 2017
1989 land price flevo 60000 guilders
2001 ,, ,, 55000 euros
2008 ,, ,, 72000 euros
2017 ,, ,, 120000 euros

will be a few thousand guilders/euro/ha more or less, BUT THESE ARE HARD FIGURES / FACTS
Subscriber
boy 24 May 2017
and this is true, because I was/am there myself....
Subscriber
lots of money 24 May 2017
It is a lot of money, but if you want to continue you have to buy something now and then. The interest charges are still below the loose lease. So if the bank wants you do something now and then.
Subscriber
Drent 24 May 2017
I wonder if dairy farmers will buy land en masse, after all, they have been doing it for years and most already have a surplus of feed. Even now livestock farmers still buy land, but can it be calculated profitably? gross turnover in that sector is much lower than in arable farming.
Subscriber
boy 24 May 2017
a lot of money wrote:
It is a lot of money, but if you want to continue you have to buy something now and then. The interest charges are still below the loose lease. So if the bank wants you do something now and then.

just like that
sandhare 24 May 2017
will calculate an average of 55 tons x 0,13 cents is 7150, take the costs off there, you have 3150 in 1x in 4 years wheat we don't count on that beets, that 3150 will not be left either, so an average of 38 years of farming before you are at zero and then there should be no setbacks so do not talk that it is cheap are often big boys with a lease company you do not see that on the outside there is no longer any farmers interest in such companies soil is often completely pissed off because that is what it is economize keep it up .in 10 years bad land unaffordable and no longer owned a farm.het new Denmark
arborist 27 May 2017
Keep it busy. Derogation off and there is still enough ground.
minced meat June 6, 2017
Well I would like to sell my land if I was in the polder and have fun with them all.
Solve mortgage and greetings
LJBaker June 7, 2017
When these prices can be paid, then it will really be time for a circular economy, land worth 120.000.00 euros will also be exhausted at some point, think about this carefully.!
kalf June 8, 2017
For the writer of this fable, the wish is the father of the thought. Probably a frustrated colleague who gives up.
Hint 22 January 2018
Interest now 1,1% for 5 years
Repay in 50 years
Price 125000 per Ha
What is repayment + interest???
It's worth it!!!
Drent 22 January 2018
Pay off in 50 years?? Dream on, pay off half in 10 years and then renegotiate the rest.
Hoeksche Waard 23 January 2018
Where do I get business money for 1,1% or 1,8% as suggested here?
Pension 23 January 2018
Hoeksche Waard wrote:
Where do I get business money for 1,1% or 1,8% as suggested here?


Euribor including bank surcharge is lower than 1,8%, if closed before the crisis, then lower than 1,1%
Berry 23 January 2018
Idd new Euribor surcharge was 1,3% in December
Subscriber
marquis 27 January 2018
Currently already 1,4
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