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Cattle grazing lease · DE

Lease your land for cattle grazing in Delaware

Delaware ranks 50/100 for cattle grazing lease moderate statewide suitability. Specific parcel-level viability depends heavily on location, scale, and infrastructure.

Free. Takes ~15 seconds. No account required.

How cattle grazing lease works for Delaware landowners

  1. 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.

  2. 2
    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.

  3. 3
    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.

  4. 4
    Set ground rules

    Spell out stocking density, water responsibilities, fence maintenance, weed control, and entry rights for inspections.

FAQ — Cattle grazing lease in Delaware

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.

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