Current Agricultural 

Use Value

(CAUV)

Hettick 2023 CAUV Slideshow.pdf

The powerpoint presentation - 2023 Triennial Update Impact on CAUV by Kelly Hattick from the Wayne County Auditor's Office is full of great info!

Visit the Wayne County Auditor's website.  This has the latest 2023 information! Along with the the presention and more info!

https://waynecountyauditor.org/Posts?category=CAUV%20%2F%20Agricultural%20District    If you have questions regarding the Agricultural District please call the Wayne County Auditor's Office at 330.287.5430. 

General Information 

For property tax purposes, farmland devoted exclusively to commercial agriculture may be valued according to its current use rather than at its "highest and best" potential use. This provision of Ohio law is known as the Current Agricultural Use Value (CAUV) program. By permitting values to be set well below true market values, the CAUV normally results in a substantially lower tax bill for working farmers.

To qualify for the CAUV, land must meet one of the following requirements during the three years preceding an application for the CAUV:

Applications for CAUV must be filed with the county auditor.  Click here for a list of all county auditors throughout Ohio.

Visit the Wayne County Auditor's website.  This has the latest 2023 information! 

https://waynecountyauditor.org/Posts?category=CAUV%20%2F%20Agricultural%20District    If you have questions regarding the Agricultural District please call the Wayne County Auditor's Office at 330.287.5430. 


Current Agricultural Use Values

Each year, the Ohio Department of Taxation sets current agricultural use values for each of Ohio's soil types. The documents below were developed by the department to show current CAUVs and explain how these values were established.   

For these documents, click on this link &  visit the Ohio Department of Taxation website.

How To Understand And Use Ohio’s CAUV

Current Agricultural Use Value, or CAUV, can bring tax relief to some Ohio landowners.

A CAUV designation can significantly reduce the real property taxes owed by the landowner, especially if the land is in an area where housing or commercial uses are alternative uses for the land.

How to qualify

To qualify, the land, during the three years prior to a CAUV application, must consist of 10 or more acres devoted exclusively to commercial agricultural use; or consist of less than 10 acres devoted exclusively to commercial agricultural use and produce, or be expected to produce, an average yearly gross income of at least $2,500.

The owner, including new owners, must file an initial application with the county auditor.

Renewal applications must be filed for each consecutive year to maintain CAUV status. The county auditor may also refer to the CAUV application as “DTE Form 109”; many county auditors now have the forms available online.

Qualified uses

Commercial animal or poultry husbandry; aquaculture; apiculture (beekeeping); the production for a commercial purpose of timber, field crops, tobacco, fruits, vegetables, nursery stock, ornamental trees, sod, or flowers.

Or the growth of timber for a noncommercial purpose, if the land on which the timber is grown is adjoined to land devoted exclusively to agricultural use.

Biodiesel production, biomass energy production, electric or heat energy production, or biologically derived methane gas production if the land on which the production facility is adjoined to land devoted exclusively to agricultural use, provided that at least 50 percent of the feedstock used in the production was derived from parcels of land under common ownership or leasehold.

Land devoted to and qualified for payments or other compensation under a land retirement or conservation program under an agreement with an agency of the federal government.

Idle land

Land may sit idle or fallow for up to one year (and even for up to three years in certain circumstances) if, during the previous three consecutive calendar years, it has been designated as land devoted exclusively to agricultural use.

Also, nothing can be done to the land that would hinder its return to agricultural production.

Unqualified status

If the land no longer qualifies, Ohio law requires landowners to pay an amount equal to the amount of the tax savings on the converted land during the three tax years immediately preceding the year in which the land is converted to non-agricultural use.

When one buys land from a farmer and then uses the land for something other than farming, the land will lose its CAUV status and “recoupment” will be triggered. The buyer and seller should work together to determine who should be responsible for the tax payback to avoid any misunderstandings.

Sources: Ohio Department of Taxation.

2023publichearingpowerpoint CAUV.pptx

2023 Power Point - By Ohio Dept of Taxation  on CAUV

2023cauvtable.xlsx

2023 CAUV Spreadsheet in Excel - This data is also availalbe to download on their website at https://tax.ohio.gov/government/real-state/cauv

CAUV Informational PDF's: