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How do you keep a farm together when someone dies without a farm succession strategy?

How do you keep a farm together when someone dies without a farm succession strategy?

The Problem (submitted by C.J.)

I’ve farmed Grandpa’s land for 12 years. Sadly, he passed away, and his will just divides the farm between his three children. My divorced parents have off-farm jobs. I’m the only one farming. Mom prefers cash rent, but my uncle wants to crop share. My aunt wants to sell so she has money to travel. We get along, but this could get ugly. I’d love for my kids to farm someday. How can I keep this together when everyone’s on a different page?

  

The Solution

Growing up, we raised hogs and it seemed like they knew how to break a fence at the absolute worst time. We’d frantically work as a family but didn’t always agree on the approach. After colorful exchanges, we got the hogs back into the barn. We burned a lot of energy just to get back to even!  

That’s kind of like when someone dies without a succession plan. Emotions are high, everything’s uncertain, and you need massive cooperation just to get back to even. You might keep the farm together, but it’s much harder once the hogs are out!  

Here are my observations from farm heirs who have succeeded in similar situations.

I’m sorry your grandpa passed away, but it could get worse. What if your mom died? Would you be able to buy out your siblings, too? Consider an insurance policy on her while everything gets sorted out. You can keep the farm together, but don’t get better at chasing hogs. Build better fences.

Mark McLaughlin is an associate with Farm Financial Strategies in Ankeny, Iowa. For the past 15 years, he has helped farm families across the Midwest develop their farm succession strategies. He grew up on a family farm near Defiance, Iowa, and shares in the fifth generation of ownership. He and his wife have three children. farmestate.com


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