Lease paperwork · Keep it simple

A farm lease you can actually read

Most ground in this country changes hands on a handshake and a memory. A handshake is a fine way to agree — and a terrible way to remember. Below: every lease type explained in plain English, and a fillable, printable one-page cash lease that says what it means. Five minutes, two signatures, both sides protected.

Which lease fits — and who carries the risk
Tenant carries the risk

Straight cash

A fixed dollar amount per acre, period. Corn makes 240 or hails out at 60 — the rent doesn’t move.

Fits when: the tenant wants full upside and can stomach full downside; the owner wants a check they can plan on. The simplest lease there is — it’s the one below.

Risk shared by formula

Flex on price

A base rent plus a bonus if price beats a trigger — e.g. base $250/ac, plus a share of the value above a set fall price. Yield risk stays with the tenant; price upside is shared.

Fits when: the owner wants a piece of a rally without farming; the tenant wants a lower guaranteed base in rough years.

Risk shared by formula

Flex on price × yield

Rent is a set percentage of actual gross revenue (actual yield × actual price), often with a floor and a cap. The truest “share the year you actually had” cash lease.

Fits when: both sides trust the yield number — put the yield-proof method (monitor, scale tickets, APH) in writing.

Risk shared in kind

Crop share

The owner takes a share of the crop itself (commonly around a third to a half, varying by region and by who pays which inputs) instead of cash. Both sides ride price and yield together.

Fits when: the owner is still a farmer at heart, wants skin in the game, and can market grain. More bookkeeping, more fairness, more conversations.

Owner carries the risk

Custom farming

Not a lease at all: the owner pays a fixed fee for the fieldwork and keeps the entire crop — and the entire risk. The mirror image of straight cash.

Fits when: the owner wants to stay “actively engaged” (which can matter for taxes and programs — ask your accountant) without owning iron.

The one-sentence version: straight cash puts the year’s risk on the tenant, custom farming puts it on the owner, and everything in between — flex and share — is a formula for splitting it. Pick the split both sides can sleep on, then write it down.
The lease — fill it in, print it, sign it
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CASH FARM LEASE

A simple fixed-cash lease · one crop term · plain terms both sides can read

1 · Parties

This lease is between (“Owner”), of , and (“Tenant”), of .

2 · The land

Owner leases to Tenant approximately tillable acres in County, , commonly known as (FSA farm no. ), for agricultural use.

3 · Term

The term begins and ends . This lease does not automatically renew except as state law provides (see §11).

4 · Rent

Tenant will pay cash rent of $ per tillable acre (× ____ acres = $______ total), payable:

  1. $ on or before , and
  2. $ on or before ,

by . Rent unpaid ten (10) days after it is due bears interest at the lesser of % per year or the maximum rate state law allows.

5 · Tenant agrees to

  1. farm the land in a good and workmanlike manner, following any applicable conservation plan;
  2. control weeds and prevent waste; leave crop residue consistent with good practice;
  3. apply no long-term-damaging practice and haul no outside waste onto the land;
  4. not assign this lease or sublet any part of the land without Owner’s written consent;
  5. surrender the land at the end of the term in as good condition as reasonable use allows.

6 · Owner agrees to

  1. pay the real-estate taxes and any assessments on the land;
  2. warrant quiet possession — Tenant holds the land for the term against anyone claiming through Owner.

7 · Improvements & repairs

No permanent improvement, removal, or alteration (buildings, fence, tile, trees) by either party without the other’s written consent, which also states who pays and who owns it afterward.

8 · Insurance & liability

Each party carries their own liability insurance and insures their own property; neither is responsible for loss or injury caused by the other’s negligence. Tenant’s crops and inputs are Tenant’s to insure.

9 · Entry

Owner (or Owner’s agent) may enter at reasonable times to inspect the land, without interfering with field operations.

10 · Hunting & recreation

Hunting and recreational rights stay with Owner unless initialed here to grant them to Tenant: Owner      / Tenant     

11 · Termination & holdover

Either party may end this lease at the end of the term by written notice delivered by the deadline state law requires. Where no statute sets a deadline, notice is due at least days before the term ends. If Tenant holds over with Owner’s consent, the holdover continues on these same terms as state law provides.

12 · Default

If either party materially breaks this lease and does not cure within thirty (30) days of written notice, the other party may pursue any remedy state law allows, including termination.

13 · Additional terms

14 · Signatures

This is the entire agreement; changes must be in writing and signed by both parties.

OWNER · SIGNATURE / DATE
TENANT · SIGNATURE / DATE

A G S I S T  ·  agsist.com/cash-lease  ·  free tools for working farmers  ·  educational sample, not legal advice — attorney review advised

Check your state’s termination deadline. Several states set a hard statutory date by which written notice must be delivered or a farm lease automatically continues another year — Iowa’s September 1 deadline is the famous one, and it forgives nobody. Your extension office or attorney can tell you your state’s rule in one phone call. Make the call before you need it.
This is an educational sample, not legal advice. It covers the plain terms most simple cash leases share, and deliberately nothing exotic. Farm lease law is state law: notice deadlines, oral-lease rules, landlord lien rights, and crop-share specifics all vary. Have your own attorney read anything before you sign it. That single hour of review is the cheapest insurance in farming.
Questions people actually ask
Is a handshake lease legally binding?

Oral farm leases are recognized in many states, but enforceability varies and multi-year oral deals can run into the statute of frauds. The better question: when memories differ in three years, what does the handshake say? A one-page written lease protects both sides — especially the friendship.

When do I have to give notice to end a lease?

Entirely state-dependent. In states with a statutory deadline, written notice delivered late means the lease runs another full year whether anyone wanted it to or not. Iowa’s September 1 rule is the best known. Verify your state’s rule with extension or an attorney — it is a cliff, not a guideline.

Cash, flex, or share — which pays the owner more?

Over a long run they tend to converge; in any single year they differ exactly by who carried the risk. Straight cash pays the owner the same in a drought and a bumper year; flex and share pay more in the good years because the owner shared the bad ones. Pick by risk appetite, not by last year’s outcome.

What’s a fair rate for my county?

USDA NASS publishes county cash rent annually. The AGSIST cash rent map shows every published county, its history, and rent as a share of realistic gross — the number that decides whether a lease actually cash-flows.

Why is this lease so short?

Because leases fail at the coffee shop, not in court. A lease both parties have actually read beats a 20-page one neither has. The additional-terms box is there for what your situation genuinely needs; your attorney can tell you what your state requires beyond it.

Go deeper

The standard educational references on farm leases are the North Central Farm Management Extension Committee’s lease guides and forms at aglease101.org, and your state extension service’s farm-management office. USDA county cash rent data: agsist.com/cash-rent. This page’s sample lease is original AGSIST text written for readability; it is not reviewed by an attorney and is not legal advice.