Ontario Farmland Values Up Just Modestly in 2024

Mar 18, 2025

Ontario farmland values followed the national trend higher in 2024, but the gains were among the weakest of all the provinces. 

Farm Credit Canada’s annual farmland values report on Tuesday showed the average value of cultivated Canadian farmland increased 9.3% this past year. That was down from the 11.5% average gain recorded in 2023 but remains higher than the five- and 10-year average gains of 8.6% and 9.1%, respectively. National farmland values have ticked higher every year since 1993. 

However, the average value of Ontario cultivated farmland was up just a modest 3.1% in 2024, well down from the 10.7% and 19.4% gains seen in the province in 2023 and 2022. This past year’s increase in Ontario farmland values bested only the 1.4% gain in P.E.I. and lagged well behind the 13.1% increase recorded in Saskatchewan, the highest in the country. In fact, it was the smallest annual increase in Ontario cultivated farmland values since rising just 2.1% in 1999. The biggest average valuation jump for the province was recorded in 2012 at 30.1%. 

As can be seen on the graphic below, the largest gain in Ontario farmland values this past year was in the central west region at 13.5%, an area where FCC said urban pressure was the primary reason for the sharper rise. On the other hand, values were flat in the mid western region. In the early part of 2024, land values in the mid western region backed off from the prices being paid in the prior six to 12 months, FCC said. The second half of 2024 saw a slight rebound in values, with the region’s annual rate of change ending up flat overall. There was also minimal sales activity here in the last quarter of 2024, the report added. 

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