Southwestern Ontario farmland values ticked lower in 2024, a likely indication of tougher times for producers, according to a new report released late Thursday.
The 2024 edition of the Southwestern Ontario Land Values report showed average farmland values across 11 counties in the southwest part of the province dipped 1.43% this past year. Report author Ryan Parker of London-based land appraiser Valco Consultants Inc. said it marked the first time values have dipped into negative territory since the report began in 2010.
“This drop, as small as it is . . . is an indication that lower crop prices, or at least lower crop margins, have appeared to put a halt to the rapid increase in average values that we have experienced in recent years,” Parker said in the report.
Among the 11 counties surveyed for the report - Huron, Perth, Oxford, Middlesex, Elgin, Lambton, Kent, Essex, Bruce, Grey, and Wellington – Essex showed the largest average value decline in 2024, down 6.7% from a year earlier. On the other hand, Grey Country posted the largest increase, with values jumping 11.1%.