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Idaho Cattle grazing: 2026 landowner guide

What Idaho landowners need to know about cattle grazing lease in 2026 — current rates, suitability score (72/100), and the providers actually doing deals.

How Idaho stacks up for cattle grazing lease

Idaho scores 72/100 on Landholder's state-level suitability index for cattle grazing lease — strong statewide fundamentals. Idaho is not a top-tier state for this use, but parcel-level economics can still work — especially for owners in better-positioned counties.

Grazing leases are the workhorse of US ranchland income. Priced per AUM (one cow-calf for one month), they're how owners of marginal cropland, brushland, and Western rangeland generate steady cash without farming.

Typical rates

$2–$90 per acre per year. Local variation can be wide; parcel-level scoring on Landholder narrows the range significantly.

How a deal comes together

  1. Determine carrying capacity. Stocking density varies wildly: 0.05 AUM/acre in Nevada to 2.5 AUM/acre in Florida pasture. Your county Extension agent or NRCS conservation planner can give a site-specific estimate.
  1. Find a rancher. Local cattle producers, county Extension, or commercial brokers (Tillable, AcreTrader) all help match. Many leases are word-of-mouth via the local livestock association.
  1. Choose a structure. Per-AUM (most flexible), per-acre flat (most predictable), or revenue-share on weight gain (rare). Most contracts run 1-5 years with renewal.
  1. Set ground rules. Spell out stocking density, water responsibilities, fence maintenance, weed control, and entry rights for inspections.

Deal structures to know

  • Per-AUM lease. Tenant pays $18-$45 per AUM/month based on regional rates and pasture quality.
  • Per-acre annual flat rate. Simpler bookkeeping; common in improved Southeast pasture at $15-$60/ac/yr.
  • Stacked with wind/solar/hunting. Grazing co-exists with wind royalties, agrivoltaics, and hunting lease — multiple income streams on the same surface.

Frequently asked

What's an AUM?

Animal-unit-month — the forage consumed by one mature cow with her calf in one month. Standard pricing unit for US grazing leases.

What rate per AUM should I charge?

BLM federal rates run ~$1.35/AUM (heavily subsidized). Private leases run $18-$45/AUM in the West, $20-$50 in the Plains, $18-$35 in the Southeast.

Do I need to provide water?

Negotiable. Tenant usually maintains existing water infrastructure (wells, troughs); landowner provides existing infrastructure. New wells/fencing are negotiated upfront.

Can I still hunt while leasing for grazing?

Yes — most grazing leases reserve hunting rights to the landowner, who can keep them or sublease as a separate hunting lease for $5-$60/ac/yr.

Next step

Run a free Landholder.com assessment for your specific parcel. Takes about a minute. We'll score all fifteen monetization paths — not just cattle grazing lease — and match you to providers actively doing deals in Idaho.

Idaho Cattle grazing: 2026 landowner guide | Landholder.com