Land Lease Agreement
LAND LEASE AGREEMENT
THIS LAND LEASE AGREEMENT ("Agreement") is made and entered into as of [Agreement Date], by and between:
LANDLORD: [Landlord Name], whose address is [Landlord Address] ("Landlord"); and
TENANT: [Tenant Name], whose address is [Tenant Address] ("Tenant").
IN CONSIDERATION of the mutual covenants herein and for other good and valuable consideration, the parties agree as follows:
1. LEASED PREMISES
Landlord hereby leases to Tenant, and Tenant hereby leases from Landlord, the real property located at [Property Address], [Governing State], containing approximately [Acreage], and more particularly described as:
[Legal Description]
(collectively, the "Premises").
2. PERMITTED USE
Tenant shall use the Premises solely for the purpose of [Permitted Use] and for no other purpose without Landlord's prior written consent. Tenant shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local laws, ordinances, regulations, and orders governing the use of the Premises, including without limitation all environmental laws, agricultural regulations, zoning laws, and any applicable state pesticide and fertilizer regulations.
3. TERM
The initial term of this Agreement commences on [Lease Start Date] and expires on [Lease End Date] ("Initial Term"), unless sooner terminated as provided herein.
Renewal: [Renewal Option]. If yes: This Agreement shall automatically renew on a year-to-year basis at the end of the Initial Term and each subsequent term, unless either party provides written notice of termination to the other at least [Notice Period] prior to the end of the then-current term. In states with statutory agricultural tenancy termination requirements (including Illinois and Iowa), the applicable statutory notice period shall govern over this provision to the extent required by law.
4. RENT
Tenant agrees to pay Landlord rent in the amount of [Rent Amount], payable [Payment Schedule], at [Landlord Address] or such other location designated by Landlord in writing.
Late Fee: If any rent payment is not received by Landlord within the grace period specified in this Agreement, Tenant shall pay a late fee of [Late Fee]. The late fee is in addition to, and not in lieu of, Landlord's other remedies for Tenant's failure to pay rent.
5. IMPROVEMENTS AND STRUCTURES
Tenant Improvements Permitted: [Improvements Allowed]
[Improvements Description]
Unless otherwise agreed in writing, all permanent improvements made by Tenant to the Premises shall become the property of Landlord upon expiration or termination of this Agreement. Tenant shall not remove or damage any existing improvements, structures, fences, or irrigation systems without Landlord's prior written consent. Upon expiration or termination, Tenant shall restore the Premises to its condition at the commencement of the lease, reasonable wear excepted, unless otherwise agreed.
6. MAINTENANCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE
Tenant shall maintain the Premises in good condition, shall not commit waste, and shall comply with all applicable environmental laws and regulations. Tenant shall not use, store, or dispose of any hazardous materials on the Premises except as specifically permitted by applicable law. Tenant shall promptly notify Landlord of any known or suspected environmental contamination on or affecting the Premises. Tenant shall indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Landlord from any environmental liability arising from Tenant's use of the Premises.
For agricultural leases, Tenant shall comply with all applicable USDA conservation compliance requirements for highly erodible land and wetlands, and shall not take any action that would jeopardize Landlord's eligibility for agricultural program benefits.
7. INSURANCE
Tenant shall maintain general liability insurance in an amount of not less than $1,000,000 per occurrence naming Landlord as additional insured, and shall provide Landlord with certificates of insurance upon request. Tenant shall also maintain any additional insurance required by applicable law for Tenant's specific use of the Premises.
8. DEFAULT AND TERMINATION
If Tenant fails to pay rent when due, fails to comply with any provision of this Agreement, or commits waste to the Premises, and does not cure such default within fifteen (15) days after written notice from Landlord (or within such longer period as required by applicable state law), Landlord may terminate this Agreement upon further written notice. Tenant shall surrender the Premises in good condition upon expiration or termination.
9. GOVERNING LAW; ENTIRE AGREEMENT
This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of [Governing State], without regard to conflict of law principles. This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties with respect to the Premises and supersedes all prior oral or written agreements. Any amendment must be in writing and signed by both parties.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Land Lease Agreement as of the date first written above.
LANDLORD: [Landlord Name]
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
TENANT: [Tenant Name]
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Landlord
________________
Signature
Tenant
________________
Signature
What Is a Land Lease Agreement?
A Land Lease Agreement in the United States governs the letting of property, fixing the rent, duration and the duties of landlord and tenant.
The primary legal framework governing land leases in the United States is state contract law and property law. All 50 US states have a Statute of Frauds requiring that any lease of real property for a term exceeding one year be in writing and signed by the party to be charged — typically both parties in practice. The Restatement (Second) of Property: Landlord and Tenant applies many landlord-tenant law principles to land leases, though many of the habitability and tenant-protection statutes that apply to residential housing have no application to bare land leases.
Agricultural land leases are governed by additional state-specific statutes. In Illinois, the Illinois Farm Tenancy Act (735 ILCS 110) requires that a cash rent farm lease with a term of more than one year provide written notice of non-renewal at least 180 days before the end of the crop year (February 28 or March 1 in most counties). Iowa Code § 562.6 similarly requires a 6-month advance written notice of termination for year-to-year farm tenancies. In California, Agricultural Land Conservation Contracts under the Williamson Act (Government Code § 51200 et seq.) restrict land use and may affect the permissible terms of agricultural leases.
Ground leases for commercial development — where a tenant constructs a building on leased land and operates for a lease term of 50 to 99 years — are a distinct category governed primarily by contract law and commercial real estate practice. Long-term ground leases are used by institutional investors, real estate investment trusts (REITs), and developers on properties including hotels, office buildings, and retail centers in major markets including Manhattan, where ground leases under buildings owned by entities such as the Rockefeller Group are well-known examples.
Environmental law intersects significantly with land leases. The Complete Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq., imposes liability on current and past 'owners and operators' of contaminated property. Courts have held that a tenant with sufficient control over land may qualify as an 'operator' under CERCLA, making the allocation of environmental liability in the land lease critically important. The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), 42 U.S.C. § 6901 et seq., regulates the storage and disposal of hazardous and solid waste on leased land.
For solar and wind energy land leases, federal law intersects through the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. § 791a et seq.), FERC interconnection regulations, and the Investment Tax Credit (ITC) under IRC § 48 and Production Tax Credit (PTC) under IRC § 45, which affect the bankability and financing of renewable energy projects on leased land.
When Do You Need a Land Lease Agreement?
A US Land Lease Agreement is needed whenever a landowner grants a third party the right to use agricultural, commercial, industrial, or recreational land for a defined period and rent without transferring title to the property.
Farmers and agricultural operators who do not own the land they farm — a common arrangement across the Midwest, Great Plains, and Southeast, where the USDA Economic Research Service estimates that approximately 39% of US agricultural land is leased rather than owner-operated — use Land Lease Agreements to document their right to plant crops, graze livestock, or conduct farming operations on land owned by absentee landowners. The lease must address crop rotation, soil conservation practices, irrigation water rights under applicable state water law (prior appropriation in western states, riparian rights in eastern states), and compliance with USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) crop insurance and agricultural program requirements.
Ranchers leasing grazing rights on private rangeland or Bureau of Land Management (BLM) allotments use Land Lease Agreements to document grazing terms, stocking rates, fence maintenance responsibilities, and compliance with BLM grazing regulations under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA), 43 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq., and the Taylor Grazing Act, 43 U.S.C. § 315 et seq.
Solar energy developers acquiring long-term land rights for utility-scale photovoltaic installations — projects that typically require 5 to 15 acres per megawatt of generating capacity and lease terms of 25 to 35 years with extension options — use Land Lease Agreements as the foundational document for project financing, permitting, and interconnection applications filed with regional transmission organizations such as PJM Interconnection, MISO, and CAISO.
Wind energy developers similarly use Land Lease Agreements (often called wind easement agreements or wind leases) to secure land rights for turbine placement, access roads, transmission lines, and meteorological equipment across large tracts of agricultural land in Texas, Iowa, Kansas, Illinois, and other wind-resource states.
Timber companies leasing the right to harvest timber from private or investment-grade timberland managed by timber investment management organizations (TIMOs) and real estate investment trusts (REITs) such as Weyerhaeuser, PotlatchDeltic, and Rayonier use Land Lease Agreements that incorporate cutting schedules, reforestation obligations, and compliance with state forestry practice acts.
Mobile home park operators who lease land parcels to mobile home owners — a structure common in states including Florida, California, Arizona, and the Carolinas — use Land Lease Agreements subject to state mobile home park acts that restrict rent increases, termination procedures, and relocation assistance obligations.
What to Include in Your Land Lease Agreement
A legally effective US Land Lease Agreement must contain the following essential provisions to define each party's rights and obligations, satisfy the Statute of Frauds, allocate environmental and improvement risk, and provide enforceable default remedies.
The legal description of the leased premises must precisely identify the parcel using the same legal description — metes and bounds, Public Land Survey System (PLSS) township and range, or platted lot and block — that appears in the landowner's deed and the county assessor's records. A site map or survey exhibit showing the leased parcel boundaries and any reserved areas, access easements, or excluded portions should be attached as an exhibit to the agreement.
The permitted use clause must specifically define the purpose for which the tenant may use the leased land — agricultural row crop production, cattle grazing, solar photovoltaic installation, commercial timber harvesting, recreational hunting, or other specified use. A land lease with an overly broad permitted use clause or no use restriction may allow the tenant to use the land for purposes the landlord did not intend and that may cause environmental damage, zoning violations, or loss of agricultural tax valuation under state agricultural preferential property tax programs (such as California's Williamson Act, Texas's agricultural rollback tax under Tax Code Chapter 23, and Florida's agricultural classification under Fla. Stat. § 193.461).
The lease term and rent provisions must specify the commencement date, the expiration date, and any renewal options (including whether renewal is automatic unless notice of non-renewal is given and the required notice period). Cash rent leases state a fixed dollar amount per acre per year payable on specified dates. Crop share leases provide that the landlord receives a percentage (typically one-third to one-half) of the crop proceeds in lieu of cash rent — these arrangements have specific accounting and tax implications and should be reviewed by an agricultural accountant.
The improvements and fixtures clause must specify: (1) what improvements the tenant may install on the land (drainage tile, grain bins, irrigation equipment, fencing, buildings, solar panels, wind turbines); (2) whether landlord approval is required for improvements; (3) who owns improvements during the lease term; (4) whether the tenant must remove improvements at lease end and restore the land; and (5) the disposition of improvements that become fixtures under the common law fixture doctrine — permanently attached structures belong to the landowner absent a contrary written agreement.
The environmental compliance clause must require the tenant to comply with all applicable federal and state environmental laws — including CERCLA, RCRA, the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251), the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. § 7401), and state pesticide, fertilizer, and water use regulations — and to promptly notify the landlord of any spills, contamination, or regulatory inspections or enforcement actions involving the leased premises. The clause must allocate liability for environmental cleanup between the parties based on who caused the contamination.
The access and easement clause must specify the tenant's right of access to the leased parcel — including access roads, easements over adjacent parcels, and the landlord's reserved right to access the property for inspection, agricultural conservation programs, hunting, or other purposes that do not unreasonably interfere with the tenant's use.
The termination and holdover clause must specify each party's right to terminate the lease, the required notice period (which for agricultural leases in many states must be given at least 6 months before the end of the crop year), the consequences of holding over after expiration, and the farmer's right to harvest crops planted before the expiration date (the emblements doctrine, recognized in all US states, protects a tenant's right to harvest crops planted before a lease termination notice).
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- 42 U.S.C. § 9601US – Cornell LII
- 42 U.S.C. § 6901US – Cornell LII
- 16 U.S.C. § 791aUS – Cornell LII
- 43 U.S.C. § 1701US – Cornell LII
- 43 U.S.C. § 315US – Cornell LII
- 33 U.S.C. § 1251US – Cornell LII
- 42 U.S.C. § 7401US – Cornell LII
- IRC § 48US – Cornell LII
- IRC § 45US – Cornell LII
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Land Lease Agreement (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/real-estate/leases/land-lease-agreement
"Land Lease Agreement (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/real-estate/leases/land-lease-agreement.
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note = {Free legal document template. Based on Common law of real-property leases (general contract law)}
}Also available for these jurisdictions:
Frequently Asked Questions
A Land Lease Agreement is legally binding in the United States once the parties capable of contracting sign it with the intent to be bound under Common law of real-property leases (general contract law). American contract law, drawn from the Restatement (Second) of Contracts and each state's common law, recognizes a Land Lease Agreement as enforceable when it shows offer, acceptance, consideration, and reasonably definite terms. Courts in the state whose law governs the agreement will hold the parties to its written terms unless a party proves fraud, duress, mistake, unconscionability, or that the subject matter is illegal. A signed Land Lease Agreement carries more evidentiary weight than an oral understanding because the writing fixes what each party promised and reduces later disputes over who agreed to what. To strengthen enforceability, the parties should each keep an original signed copy, date their signatures, and complete every blank rather than leaving terms open to interpretation by a judge.
A Land Lease Agreement in the United States must satisfy the core elements of a valid contract: mutual assent shown by offer and acceptance, consideration exchanged between the parties, the legal capacity of each signer, and a lawful purpose. The relevant framework is Common law of real-property leases (general contract law) governs how the document is interpreted and enforced. The writing should clearly identify each party by full legal name, describe the rights and obligations of each side, and state the effective date and any term or expiration. Where one party is a business entity, the person signing should hold authority to bind that entity, such as an officer, manager, or member. Specific states may add formalities for certain agreements, so the parties should confirm local rules before signing. A Land Lease Agreement that omits a material term, leaves the price or duration blank, or fails to identify the parties accurately risks being found too uncertain for a court to enforce.
A Land Lease Agreement should state the security deposit amount, how it may be used, and when it will be returned, because nearly every state regulates deposits by statute. State landlord-tenant laws commonly cap the deposit at one to two months' rent, require the landlord to return it within a set window after move-out — often 14 to 30 days — and demand an itemized list of any deductions for unpaid rent or damage beyond normal wear and tear. Several states require the deposit to be held in a separate account and some require interest to be paid to the tenant. A landlord who fails to follow the state's deposit rules can face penalties of two to three times the wrongfully withheld amount in some jurisdictions. The Land Lease Agreement should reference a move-in inspection so both parties have a record of the unit's condition, which makes end-of-tenancy deductions easier to justify and harder to challenge.
A Land Lease Agreement binds the tenant for the full term unless the lease, the landlord's consent, or state law allows an earlier exit. A tenant who leaves before the term ends generally remains responsible for rent until the unit is re-rented, though most states require the landlord to make reasonable efforts to mitigate by finding a replacement tenant. Federal and state law create protected exceptions: the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (50 U.S.C. § 3955) lets active-duty military terminate a residential lease on qualifying orders, and many states permit early termination for documented domestic violence or uninhabitable conditions. An early-termination clause in the Land Lease Agreement can set a defined buyout, such as two months' rent plus forfeiture of the deposit, which gives both sides certainty. A tenant who simply abandons the unit without using one of these paths risks liability for the remaining rent and possible damage to credit if the balance goes to collections.
A Land Lease Agreement generally does not require notarization or witnesses to be enforceable between a landlord and tenant, because most residential leases take effect on signing. State landlord-tenant statutes, many modeled on the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (URLTA), focus on written terms and required disclosures rather than formal execution rituals. Some states do require notarization or recording for leases that run beyond one year, since long-term tenancies can be treated like an interest in real property under the Statute of Frauds. A landlord who plans to record a long-term Land Lease Agreement with the county should check whether the recorder requires acknowledgment before a notary. Federal law adds one substantive requirement: for housing built before 1978, the parties must receive a lead-based paint disclosure under 42 U.S.C. § 4852d. Even where no formality is mandated, having both parties sign and date the Land Lease Agreement and keep copies protects each side if the tenancy is later disputed.
A Land Lease Agreement can be amended after signing when all parties agree to the change and record it in writing. Under general US contract principles, an amendment is itself a contract, so it needs the same mutual assent and, in many states, fresh consideration or a signed written modification to be enforceable. The cleanest method is a dated amendment or addendum that identifies the original Land Lease Agreement, states exactly which sections change, and is signed by everyone who signed the original. Striking through or handwriting edits on the signed original invites disputes about who approved the change and when, so a separate written amendment is the preferred approach. Where the agreement contains a 'no oral modification' clause, only a signed writing will alter the terms, and informal promises to change the deal will not bind the parties. Keeping each amendment attached to the original Land Lease Agreement preserves a complete record of the parties' final agreement.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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