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Various options exist for landowners who wish to
protect their family lands from development in
perpetuity. These include:
Conservation Easements
A conservation easement is a legal agreement between
a landowner and a land trust or government agency
that permanently limits uses of the land to protect
its conservation values. It allows you to continue
to own and use your land and to sell it or pass it
on to heirs.
When you donate a conservation easement to a land
trust, you give up some of the rights associated
with the land. For example, you might give up the
right to subdivide or develop the land, while
retaining the right to grow crops. Future owners
also will be bound by the easement's terms. The
land trust is responsible for making sure the
easement's terms are followed.
Conservation easements offer great flexibility. An
easement on property containing rare wildlife
habitat might prohibit any development, for example,
while one on a farm might allow continued farming
and the building of additional agricultural
structures. An easement may apply to just a portion
of the property, and need not require public access.
A landowner sometimes sells a conservation easement,
but usually easements are donated. If the donation
benefits the public by permanently protecting
important conservation resources and meets other
federal tax code requirements, it can
qualify as a tax-deductible charitable donation.
The amount of the donation is the difference between
the land's value with the easement and its value
without the easement. Placing an easement on your
property may also result in property
tax savings.
Perhaps most importantly, a conservation easement
can be essential for passing land on to the next
generation. By removing the land's development
potential, the easement lowers its market value,
which in turn lowers the estate
tax. Whether the easement is donated during life
or by will, it can make a critical difference in the
heirs' ability to keep the land intact.
Click here to view our Protecting Horse Country brochure.
Land Donation
Donating land for conservation purposes is truly one
of the finest legacies a person can leave to future
generations. It may be the best conservation
strategy for you if you 1) do not wish to pass the
land on to heirs; 2) own property you no longer use;
3) own highly appreciated property; 4) have
substantial real estate holdings and wish to reduce
estate tax burdens; or 5) would like to be relieved
of the responsibility of managing and caring for
land.
Donating land releases you from the responsibility
of managing the land and can provide
substantial income tax deductions and estate tax
benefits (while avoiding any capital gains taxes
that would have resulted from selling the property).
Most important, if the land is donated because of
its conservation value, it will be protected.
(Although our focus here is on conservation land,
commercial and residential properties can also be
donated to a land trust, with the understanding that
the organization will sell the land to support its
conservation work.)
Donating a remainder interest in land
An outright donation is not the only way to give
land. You can continue to live on the land by
donating a remainder interest and retaining a
reserved life estate. In this arrangement, you
donate the property during your lifetime, but
continue to live on and use the property. When you
die (or sooner if you choose), the land trust gains
full title and control over the property. By
donating a remainder interest, you can continue to
enjoy your land and may be eligible for an income
tax deduction when the gift is made. The deduction
is based on the fair market value of the donated
property less the expected value of the reserved
life estate.
Donating land by will
If you want to own and control your land during your
lifetime, but assure its protection after your
death, you can donate it by will. You should make
sure the chosen recipient is willing and able to
receive the gift.
Land donations that establish a life income
If you have land you would like to protect by
donating it to a land trust, but need to receive
income during your lifetime, you might use a charitable gift annuity. In a
charitable gift annuity, you agree to transfer
certain property to a charity, and the charity
agrees to make regular annuity payments to one or
two beneficiaries you specify for life. Your gift of
land usually qualifies for a charitable income tax
deduction at the time of the gift, based on the
value of the land less the expected value of the
annuity payments.
Another option for donating property and receiving
regular income is a charitable
remainder unitrust. You place the land in a
trust, first putting a conservation easement on it
if it is to be protected. Then the trustee sells the
land and invests the net proceeds from the sale. One
or more beneficiaries you specify receive payments
each year for a fixed term or for life, then the
trustee turns the remaining funds in the trust over
to the land trust. The gift qualifies for a
charitable income tax deduction when the land is put
in the trust, based on the value of the land less
the expected value of the payments. Charitable gift
annuities and charitable remainder unitrusts are
most useful for highly appreciated land, the sale of
which would incur high capital gains tax.
Bargain Sale of Land
If you need to realize some immediate income from
selling your land, yet would like the property to go
to a land trust, a bargain sale might be the answer.
In a bargain sale, you sell the land to a land trust
for less than its fair market value. This not only
makes it more affordable for the land trust, but
offers several benefits to you: it provides cash,
avoids some capital gains tax, and entitles you to a
charitable income tax deduction based on the
difference between the land's fair market value
and its sale price.
Additional Resources for Land Owners
Steve Small, Esq.
Family Lands Remembered, Rural Lands Stewardship Program
International Carbon Bank & Exchange
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
Private Landowner Network
Conservation Tax Center



For more information on conservation options for
landowners,
email us at info@conserveflorida.org
or call us at 352-466-4581.
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