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When Heirs Inherit Forestland, They Get More Than Trees


More than 10 million families and individuals own private forestland in the United States, totaling 259 million acres, or 37% of all U.S. forests. The typical owner is between 55 and 75 years old.

For trust and estate advisors, that points to a significant transfer of private forestland in the years ahead. But this isn’t simply a question of who receives the land when the current owner dies. Private forestland is entering a generational transfer moment just as carbon, conservation, recreation and renewable-energy markets are changing how the land is valued, restricted, monetized and inherited.

The risk is that heirs may inherit not just land, but decades-long contracts, regulatory obligations and family disputes over what the asset is supposed to be.

Many private forestland holdings are family-owned or closely held. That structure can preserve land across generations, but only if the ownership documents can withstand transition. When trusts, operating agreements or other governing documents don’t clearly address decision-making authority, transfer restrictions, buy-sell rights, management responsibility, dispute resolution and exit rights, the next generation may inherit uncertainty.

Related:Beneficiary Designations Gone Wrong

Those conflicts are easy to imagine. One heir may want to continue timber operations. Another may want income distributions. Another may favor a conservation easement, recreational use, development or sale. One family member may live near the property and have managed it for years, while others may be disconnected from the land but still hold ownership interests.

Consider three adult siblings who inherit 1,500 acres of timberland through a trust. One lives nearby and has managed the property for years. One wants to sell her share to fund retirement. The third wants to place a conservation easement on the land. The trust document is silent on decision-making authority, buyout rights and permitted uses. The dispute that follows isn’t really about trees. It’s about a legal structure that wasn’t designed to answer the questions the next generation must now resolve.

Changing Markets

The challenge is becoming more complex as forestland markets change. Traditional timber revenue remains important, but landowners are increasingly evaluating opportunities involving biomass, small-diameter wood, residuals, conservation transactions, carbon-related arrangements, renewable energy, mitigation, recreation and other land-based revenue streams.

These opportunities can create value, but they can also create long-term obligations. A carbon agreement, for example, may include restrictions on harvesting, required management practices and clawback provisions if carbon credits are reversed. If the agreement runs for 40 years, it may affect a later sale, a lender’s willingness to finance the property or the ability of heirs to use the land as they expected.

Related:Rethinking Long-Term Care and Disability Limitations

That is where estate planning, fiduciary planning and asset protection converge. Advisors should ask not only who owns the land, but what obligations run with it. Does an agreement bind successors? Does it limit future land use? Could it affect financing, valuation, liquidity, tax planning or conservation goals?

Property Rights

Property rights also remain central to value. Access, boundaries, easements, road use, water rights, mineral rights, recreational rights, leases, encroachments and neighboring land uses can all affect ownership and operations. Informal access that worked for decades may become a dispute when ownership changes. Hunting leases, outfitter arrangements, short-term recreational access and trespass issues can create liability and conflict with timber operations or conservation restrictions.

Regulatory and Policy Risks

Regulatory and policy risks should also be included in the planning discussion. Environmental regulation, permitting, fire management, disaster recovery, conservation programs, tax policy, land-use restrictions, transportation, endangered species issues, water-related regulation and public incentive programs may all influence management decisions.

Related:Trusts & Estates: June 2026 Digital Edition

Ingredients for Well-Designed Plan 

The practical point is straightforward: Private forestland should be planned for as a complex, income-producing and restriction-sensitive asset, not merely as acreage to be transferred at death. A well-designed plan should address governance, liquidity, fiduciary authority, permitted uses, dispute resolution, exit rights and the effect of long-term conservation, carbon, recreation, energy or timber arrangements. The objective isn’t to predict every future market or family conflict. It’s to create a legal structure that can respond to them.





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