Lease your land for wind in Vermont
Vermont ranks 55/100 for wind land lease — moderate statewide suitability. Specific parcel-level viability depends heavily on location, scale, and infrastructure.
How wind land lease works for Vermont landowners
- 1Site assessment
Developers map wind resource, terrain, transmission, and parcel size. They typically need 80+ contiguous acres to fit a single turbine with setbacks.
- 2Option period
A 3-5 year wind easement / option agreement pays modest annual fees while developers build out a project area with neighboring landowners.
- 3Construction
On project approval, turbines are installed (6-12 months). You receive a construction-period payment plus ongoing royalties.
- 4Royalty stream
30+ year royalty based on per-turbine annual payment, percentage of gross revenue, or production-based formula.
Providers serving Vermont
7 providers in our directory serve Vermont for wind.
AES Corporation's renewable arm. Active developer of utility-scale solar and wind across the US.
Charlottesville-based wind and solar developer with 30+ GW pipeline.
EDF's North American renewables arm. Develops, owns, and operates utility-scale wind/solar.
Privately held global renewables developer. Lease and acquire wind/solar sites at scale.
Marketplace platform connecting landowners with energy buyers across solar, wind, oil & gas, and data centers.
World's largest generator of wind and solar power. Active landowner lease program across the wind belt.
Independent renewables company with large-scale wind portfolios in TX, NM, OK, KS.
FAQ — Wind land lease in Vermont
Yes. Turbines occupy 0.5-1 acre each. The rest of the leased land remains in active agricultural use.
Typically 30-50 years with extensions. Initial easement option period is 3-5 years before construction.
No. The developer owns and operates them. At end of term, they remove turbines and restore the site.
Texas, Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, Wyoming. The 'wind belt' runs from West Texas up through the Dakotas.
Free, instant assessment — across all fifteen monetization paths, not just wind.