The minimum acreage is 5 contiguous acres, fully stocked with trees, excluding any land allocated to improvements. You need to apply whenever land status or ownership changes. Don't take anything for granted, especially when dealing with timberland classifications.
Fully stocked means the land is stocked with the optimum number of trees that can successfully grow in an area based on size of stem or diameter. The larger the tree’s diameter, the fewer trees per acre the ground will adequately support. We use the following rule of thumb:
Improvements are anything attributed to the land that changes the functional use of the land. Examples are clearing for a home site, public right of way, utilities easement, clearing for other uses (agriculture, recreational etc.), any buildings, etc. (The smaller the acres, the more critical these are in qualifying land.)
In meeting the aforementioned, you need to submit an application for each individual parcel that is being applied for. Applicants will be required to prepare a detailed, viable and workable, written management plan. It needs to address present and future needs recommended for the timber stand within the ownership. One plan can cover multiple parcels if they are contiguous, and each parcel is individually identified within the context of the plan. Plans must be updated as harvesting occurs.
Contiguous acres are individual acres that join or touch each other's boundaries and are under the same exact ownership. For instance, 5 one-acre parcels can qualify for timber if they are all touching each other, there are no improvements, they are fully stocked and managed to produce timber as a crop, and the ownership is the same.
You can have 100 acres of 1 to 4.99-acre lots within the county, but if they do not touch other parcels of the same ownership none will qualify for the timber classification.
Parcels divided by a road, easement, creek or rights-of-way, etc. are still considered contiguous if they are adjacent to one another, and the ownership is the same.
They are not considered contiguous if the only thing connecting them is a public road or easement and they are not adjacent to each other. For instance, you own a 3-acre parcel on Why Not Road, and you own another 3-acre parcel a half mile down Why Not Road. Sorry neither will qualify!
There are parcels with sufficient total acres that still won't qualify for timber. Say you have a 120- acre parcel where 115 acres are being farmed for hay and 1 acre is designated for the home site, which leaves 4 acres that are loaded with trees. It doesn't matter that there are 120 contiguous acres total; only 4 have timber so they will not qualify for the classification. This owner could plant another acre or two of the farm ground into trees to meet the 5-acre minimum and qualify by submitting a proper application and management plan.
If in doubt whether your ownership is contiguous, contact the Assessor's office and schedule a time to review your ownership to verify what is and isn't contiguous.
The application is needed to identify the acres you wish to have assessed as timber-producing land (there is no cost to file). The application and the management plan must be received by the Assessor's Office by December 31st of the year when you wish to be assessed in the program.
Applications identify the landowner(s), addresses, parcel & AIN #'s, legal description of parcel, number of acres being applied for, and which option of timberland classification you wish to have your land assessed. The classifications are Land Productivity or Bare Land & Yield, which are explained below.
Applications are also considered proof of an agreement between landowner & county that any land classified for timber has a primary purpose of maintaining and managing the trees on said land as a crop for eventual harvest. This is further evidenced by the management plan and physical activities administered on the ground.
If there is no physical, ownership, or use changes to the parcel, you are only required to file once for as long as you own and manage the parcel for timber production. Management plans must be updated as harvesting occurs, as that changes the description and prescription on existing plans.
Every 10 years (beginning in 1982) landowners can change from one timber option to the other. All timberland under the same ownership within Idaho must carry the same option, so if one is changed all must be changed.
Any changes, (segregation, plat, name changes, land use on all or a portion, acres, swaps, lot line adjustments-- any change) Requires the new submission of application and plan update or the land(s) will be removed from the classification.
As long as landowners stay active in the management of their timber crop, with proper silvicultural prescriptions and treatment when need arises, their lands will remain qualified. A new application will not be needed barring the changes mentioned above. All properties receiving the classification will be inspected for their compliance periodically to assure they are still being maintained for timber production. If they are determined to be inactive, the owner will be notified, and the parcel will be removed from timber classification.
For more information, contact us at 208-265-1440 or Click here to get your Forest Land Exemption Application
The main difference is value per acre. Land in the Land Productivity (LP) option is assessed at a higher value per acre which also means slightly more property taxes per acre. This is because the value per acre includes the value of the land, the potential tree growth per acre per year, and a 5-year average stumpage value.
The Bare Land and Yield (BL&Y) option only values the bare land's potential to grow trees based on a 5-year average of stumpage values; it does not consider the yearly tree growth production and value until the trees are harvested. At the time of harvest, there is a 3% yield tax billed on the stumpage reported by the mills. This option is subject to a recapture of deferred taxes when the use of the land changes or when the ownership changes and the designation is removed. If the land has a change in use, the recapture tax is the difference in real estate taxes between the BL&Y value and full market value. When the land changes ownership, the recapture tax is calculated as the difference in taxes that was deferred between the two options. The Assessor's office can provide more detailed information that owners need to study before choosing an option.
The BL&Y option for 2024 is taxed at a range between $65.00 to $159 per acre on average, and the Productivity option is taxed at a range between $136 and $552 per acre on average. The difference in taxes for the number of years that the land has been in the program up to 10 years is the deferred taxes collected.
For more information contact us at 208-265-1440 or go to Idaho Forest Taxation Law 2024 information
A Management plan is a written document that describes your forest's current condition and its needs assessment for future timber crops.
The plan provides an organized decision framework that demonstrates active management, provides valuable records (for tax purposes and in case of timber theft or trespass), establishes current and future goals, gives a comprehensive look at all forest management variables, helps to systematically organize any decision making, helps consider the effects of one activity to other interests (such as how a harvest may effect water quality) and establishes effective communication of your interests and concerns to loggers, foresters or others you may work with in managing your timber. With a good plan, you will be less likely to make costly mistakes with your management decisions. My favorite phrase is "Failing to plan is planning to fail."
Bottom line-look at a plan as being the same thing as a blueprint for a house; plan what you want the forest land to look like before you ever act on the ground. Traditionally, plans are prepared by a forester. State law says it should be reviewed by a qualified individual (consulting forester, staff forester, industrial forester, or agency foresters). Private landowners may prepare their own plan if they have any forestry knowledge, and the agency forester can review it for compliance. Fees paid for professionally prepared plans may be deductible, check with your tax preparer.
The minimum requirements needed in a management plan are:
Property owner's name, date of plan preparation, name of plan preparer (if different then owner), legal description and parcel identification number(s) or bill number(s).
Legible map (signifying project areas, land characteristics and access).
General description of the existing forest stand(s) including species, age and size classes, stocking (dense to sparse), canopy coverage, water ways or riparian areas, topography and aspect(s) and estimated volume per acre or trees per acre.
Identification of any health problems (insects, disease, suppression, weather, past management or lack thereof, natural or mechanical damage, etc.). Potential fire hazards, wildlife or aquatic life must also be identified.
Condition of property lines (have they been located), is access adequate to stand
Any uses other than forestry within the property boundaries.
Type of equipment needed to harvest the stand(s).
After this information, lay out your blueprint for what you want your property to look like and what type of crop want to be producing in 10 to 20 plus years. Next, plan out the management activities that are going to be initiated to accomplish your goals, both short-term (3 to 5 years) and long-term (10 to 20 plus years).
Identify whether it is a pre-commercial or commercial activity (out of pocket or for profit).
When it is projected to start and be completed, how and who will accomplish the work, what type of equipment will be used (hand, ground equipment, cable, horse, etc.).
Will there be any slash created and if so, how will it be treated?
What time of the year will work be done and why (i.e. if you have a thick stand of immature pine species you want to thin, because of potential insect problems, you will want to thin in late summer or fall and dispose of the slash in early winter or prior to the next spring melt).
Identify what will be done for erosion control and stream protection (if one exists). Are new roads needed?
What species of trees and product are you managing for (why and how)?
What types of commercial harvests are projected in the future. Why, when and how will they be accomplished? How much volume (%) is projected to be removed in the harvest practice and will the harvest cover all or a portion of the ownership?
Remember one plan can cover multiple contiguous parcels or acres of the same ownership as long as their individual differences (if any) are identified within the plan and on the map. For more information, contact us at 208-265-1440.
That is the free choice of each individual landowner and may be the right one if they either do not wish to cut any trees, hire a forester, have no timber management experience or do not want to spend the time, money and energy it takes to maintain and manage timber as a crop. The honesty of the decision is admirable, but the bottom line is that the parcel will not qualify or be classified as timberland if it is left "natural". It will be assessed at full market value.
It is the county's responsibility to ensure that the intent of the law is being accomplished by landowners actively managing their land for the primary purpose of raising trees as a crop. The timber classification requires administering proper silvicultural treatments to encourage growth, health, and sustainable yields for the purpose of generating income at some point and time through eventual harvest(s).
For more information, contact us at 208-265-1440.
We do understand and will be willing to try to assist individuals who have severe health and financial challenges if the property has been owned for a while. For individuals purchasing timber property, it is difficult to understand how you cannot afford to hire the proper help if needed. If you set your lands up correctly, most everything you do to the land is a write off. Also, the amount of savings most receive on their property taxes would offset the cost of hiring assistance.
Timber management (depending on your stand) usually only requires major physical work every 5-10 years. Once the initial work is completed, your time will be used for monitoring and improving the growth, health and value of the stand and researching and planning for the next harvest or treatment. Timber management is an excellent family venture. Make it enjoyable as it is a lifetime project.
For more information contact us at 208-265-1440.
Absolutely, as long as there are still 5 or more treed acres remaining after 1 acre is removed for the home site, and they are or can still be managed as a timber crop. The 1 acre will be valued as an improved home site and the remaining 5 or more acres will continue to be classified as timber.
December 31st of the current tax year.