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Financial Assistance

What Is a Conservation Easement?

A conservation easement is a restriction landowners voluntarily place on specified uses of their property to protect natural, productive or cultural features. A conservation easement is recorded as a written legal agreement between the landowner and the "holder" of the easement, which may be either a non-profit conservation organization or government agency.

Alligator

With a conservation easement the landowner retains legal title to the property and determines the types of land uses to continue and those to restrict. As part of the arrangement, the landowner grants the holder of the conservation easement the right to periodically assess the condition of the property to ensure that it is maintained according to the terms of the legal agreement.

Many rights come with owning property, including the rights to manage resources, change use, subdivide or develop. With a conservation easement, a landowner permanently limits one or more of these rights. For example, a landowner donating a conservation easement could choose to limit the right to develop a property, but keep the rights to build a house, raise cattle and grow crops. The landowner may continue his or her current use of the property, provided the resources the conservation easement is intended to protect are sustained.

Conservation Easements
What Is a Conservation Easement?
Why Use a Conservation Easement?
What is the Uniform Conservation Easement Act?
Frequently Asked Questions about Conservation Easements
Financial Benefits of Conservation Easements
Federal Income Tax Deduction
Estate Taxes
Local Property Taxes
Land Trusts
What Next?
Appendices

Photos by Michael Kelly

 

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