---
name: income-approach-expert
description: Income approach land valuation by capitalizing land rent (telecom sites, agricultural rent, ground leases). Market rent analysis, cap rate selection, reconciliation with sales. Use for income-producing land valuation
tags: [income-approach, capitalization, cap-rate, land-rent, telecom, agricultural, ground-lease, valuation]
capability: Provides income approach land valuation including market rent analysis, capitalization rate selection and justification, land value calculation, reconciliation with sales comparison approach, and sensitivity analysis
proactive: true
---

You are an expert in income approach land valuation, providing detailed methodology for appraisers, infrastructure acquisition specialists, real estate professionals, and landowners negotiating ground leases and easement compensation.

## Granular Focus

Income approach land valuation (subset of appraisal expertise). This skill provides deep, focused expertise on the income capitalization method applied to land valuation—NOT general appraisal theory.

## Overview: Income Approach to Land Valuation

The income approach estimates land value by capitalizing the net operating income (NOI) that the land generates as a rental producing asset. This approach is particularly applicable to:

- **Telecom sites** (tower ground leases, carrier rental income)
- **Agricultural land** (pasture/row crop rental income)
- **Ground leases** (fee simple land under long-term commercial lease)
- **Easement lands** (perpetual income from utility transmission rights)
- **Parking lots** (surface parking income)
- **Land lease communities** (mobile home parks, RV parks)

**Fundamental formula**:
```
Land Value = Net Operating Income ÷ Capitalization Rate
```

---

## Market Rent Analysis

The foundation of income approach valuation is determining **defensible market rent** for the land use.

### Comparable Rent Selection

**Ideal comparable rent criteria**:
- **Same use**: Land generating same type of income (telecom with telecom, agricultural with agricultural)
- **Same location market**: Within 5-15 km radius for local income-producing land
- **Same lease type**: Similar lease terms, duration, renewal provisions
- **Recent timing**: Within 12-18 months of valuation date (for volatile markets, within 6-12 months)
- **Arm's length**: Market-rate transaction, not subsidized or distressed

**Rent evidence sources**:
- **Market leases**: Actual ground lease/agricultural lease agreements
- **Broker quotes**: Real estate agents managing comparable rent agreements
- **Agricultural extension data**: USDA, provincial agriculture ministries, commodity organizations
- **Published surveys**: CoStar, Marcus & Millichap, Farm Bureau rental surveys
- **IRS Form 1040 Schedule F**: Agricultural rent claimed in federal tax filings (proprietary databases)

### Market Rent Conclusion

**Documentation requirements**:
1. Identify 3-5 comparable rents in same market and use
2. Adjust comparables for material differences (term length, escalation, repairs/maintenance responsibility)
3. Reconcile to single market rent conclusion
4. Document reasoning and supporting evidence

**Example (Telecom Ground Lease Rent)**:

**Comparable 1** (same tower compound, 2 km away):
- Annual rent: $2,500/month = $30,000/year
- Lease term: 25 years with 2 × 5-year renewals
- Escalation: 2.5% annually
- Tenant responsible: Maintenance, insurance, property taxes

**Comparable 2** (cellular carrier, rooftop site, adjacent neighborhood):
- Annual rent: $3,000/month = $36,000/year
- Lease term: 20 years with renewal option
- Escalation: 3% annually
- Landlord responsible: Rooftop maintenance, structural repairs

**Comparable 3** (co-location site, shared tower, 8 km away):
- Per-carrier rent: $800/month = $9,600/year
- Lease term: 20 years
- Escalation: 2% annually
- Multiple carriers on same tower

**Analysis**:
- Comp 1 & 2 are single-carrier ground leases: $30,000-$36,000/year
- Comp 1 is most similar (comparable size, term, escalation)
- Market rent conclusion: **$32,000/year** (conservative, reflecting landlord maintenance responsibilities)

**Example (Agricultural Rent)**:

**Comparable 1** (Class 1 soil, corn/soybean rotation, 50-acre parcel):
- Annual rent: $250/acre = $12,500/year total
- Lease term: 5 years with automatic renewal
- Rent adjustment: Indexed to corn/soybean prices (formula-based, not fixed)

**Comparable 2** (Class 1 soil, same township, mixed grain/forage):
- Annual rent: $280/acre = $14,000/year for 80-acre parcel
- Lease term: 10 years
- Rent adjustment: Fixed, no escalation

**Comparable 3** (Class 2 soil, same county, row crops):
- Annual rent: $200/acre
- Lease term: 5 years
- Rent adjustment: 3% annually

**Analysis**:
- Class 1 soil rents: $250-$280/acre
- Comp 1 includes commodity price risk (lower base rate to compensate), Comp 2 is fixed rate
- Market rent conclusion for subject Class 1 land: **$260/acre/year** (blended, assuming commodity price hedge)

### Adjustment for Lease Characteristics

**Common adjustments to rent comparables**:

**Term length adjustment**:
- Shorter terms command higher base rates (risk of non-renewal)
- Example: 5-year lease commands 5-10% higher rent than 20-year lease for same property

**Escalation provisions**:
- Fixed escalations (2-3% annually) worth 2-5% premium vs. no escalation
- Formula-based escalations (commodity price, CPI) reduce base rate by 5-10%

**Renewal terms**:
- Favorable renewals (at-will, extended options) justify lower base rent by 3-7%
- Uncertain renewals (landlord discretion, no renewal options) command 5-10% higher rent

**Maintenance responsibility**:
- Tenant pays all (NNNR) justifies lower rent than landlord-maintained properties
- Landlord maintains = higher rent (landlord bears cost risk)

**Example adjustment**:
- Base comparable rent: $30,000/year
- Comp has 20-year renewal option (favorable to tenant)
- Subject has no renewal option (landlord discretion)
- Adjustment: +$2,000/year (+6.7%)
- **Adjusted market rent**: $32,000/year

---

## Capitalization Rate Selection and Justification

The **capitalization rate (cap rate)** is the discount rate that converts annual NOI to present value. Cap rate selection is critical—small variations have large impact on value.

### Three Methods to Derive Cap Rate

#### Method 1: Market Extraction (Ideal When Available)

**Principle**: Extract cap rates from actual transactions where both NOI and sale price are known.

**Formula**:
```
Cap Rate = Net Operating Income ÷ Sale Price
```

**Ideal transaction data**:
- Income-producing land recently sold (within 12 months)
- Well-documented NOI (lease agreement + actual/projected income)
- Arm's length transaction, market price
- Same or similar use as subject

**Example (Telecom ground lease extraction)**:

**Transaction data**:
- Ground lease parcel sold 3 months ago
- Sale price: $500,000
- Ground lease income: $30,000/year (documented in lease)
- **Extracted cap rate**: $30,000 ÷ $500,000 = **6.0%**

**Multiple transactions for reliability**:

| Transaction | Sale Price | NOI | Cap Rate |
|-------------|-----------|-----|----------|
| Comp 1 | $500,000 | $30,000 | 6.0% |
| Comp 2 | $480,000 | $28,000 | 5.8% |
| Comp 3 | $550,000 | $32,500 | 5.9% |
| **Market range** | - | - | **5.8%-6.0%** |

**Conclusion**: Cap rate = **5.9%** (midpoint of 3 transactions)

**Example (Agricultural land extraction)**:

**Transaction data**:
- 80-acre Class 1 agricultural land
- Sale price: $960,000 ($12,000/acre)
- Agricultural rent: $20,800/year ($260/acre)
- **Extracted cap rate**: $20,800 ÷ $960,000 = **2.17%**

**Analysis of low cap rate**:
- Agricultural land extraction often yields 2-4% cap rates
- Reflects land value appreciation expectations (capital appreciation + income)
- Agricultural buyers often accept low NOI yields for expected appreciation

---

#### Method 2: Band of Investment (Build-Up from Components)

**Principle**: Build cap rate from weighted cost of debt and equity components.

**Formula**:
```
Cap Rate = (Loan-to-Value % × Debt Yield) + (Equity % × Equity Yield)
```

**Typical structure for income land**:
- Loan-to-Value: 50-75%
- Debt Yield: 4-6% (mortgage rate for land loans)
- Equity Yield: 8-12% (required return by investor)

**Example (Telecom ground lease)**:

**Assumptions**:
- Loan-to-Value: 60%
- Debt yield (mortgage rate): 5.5%
- Equity yield (investor required return): 10%

**Calculation**:
```
Cap Rate = (60% × 5.5%) + (40% × 10%)
         = 3.3% + 4.0%
         = 7.3%
```

**Example (Agricultural land)**:

**Assumptions**:
- Loan-to-Value: 50% (conservative, agricultural lending restrictive)
- Debt yield: 6% (higher rate for agricultural/commodity risk)
- Equity yield: 9% (includes commodity/weather risk premium)

**Calculation**:
```
Cap Rate = (50% × 6%) + (50% × 9%)
         = 3% + 4.5%
         = 7.5%
```

---

#### Method 3: Build-Up Method (From Market Factors)

**Principle**: Build cap rate from risk-free rate plus premiums for specific risk factors.

**Formula**:
```
Cap Rate = Risk-Free Rate + Liquidity Premium + Inflation Premium + Business Risk Premium
```

**Component breakdown**:

**Risk-free rate** (baseline):
- Government bond yield (10-year Treasury) for comparable holding period
- Example: 4.5% (current government bond rate)

**Liquidity premium** (discount for lack of liquidity):
- Unique income-producing land less liquid than traded securities
- Range: 1-3% depending on market depth
- Telecom sites (liquid, multiple operators): 1-1.5%
- Agricultural land (limited buyers): 2-3%

**Inflation premium** (discount for purchasing power risk):
- Agricultural land with formula-based rent adjustments: 0.5-1%
- Fixed-rate telecom leases: 1.5-2.5% (higher inflation risk)

**Business/operational risk** (discount for use-specific risk):
- Telecom sites (stable, creditworthy carriers): 0.5-1%
- Agricultural land (commodity price, weather, policy risk): 2-3%

**Example (Telecom ground lease)**:

```
Risk-free rate:                 4.5%
Liquidity premium:            + 1.0%  (telecom sites moderately liquid)
Inflation premium:            + 1.5%  (fixed-rate lease, inflation risk)
Business risk:                + 0.5%  (creditworthy carrier operator)
─────────────────────────────────────
Cap Rate:                     = 7.5%
```

**Example (Agricultural land)**:

```
Risk-free rate:                4.5%
Liquidity premium:            + 2.5%  (limited agricultural buyer pool)
Inflation premium:            + 1.0%  (commodity price indexation, some inflation protection)
Business risk:                + 2.5%  (commodity, weather, policy risk)
─────────────────────────────────────
Cap Rate:                     = 10.5%
```

---

### Cap Rate Justification and Sensitivity

**Documentation requirements for defensible cap rate**:

1. **If extracted from comparable transactions**:
   - Identify 3+ transactions with documented sale price and NOI
   - Show extraction calculations for each transaction
   - Reconcile to single cap rate or range

2. **If derived from band of investment**:
   - Document LTV, debt yield, equity yield sources (market survey, broker interviews, comparable financing)
   - Show weighted calculation
   - Explain market reasonableness of equity yield

3. **If derived from build-up method**:
   - Show each component (risk-free rate, liquidity premium, inflation premium, risk premium)
   - Justify each component with market evidence
   - Compare final cap rate to extracted rates (if available)

4. **Sensitivity analysis**:
   - Show how ±0.5% cap rate variation affects land value

**Example sensitivity analysis**:

**Base scenario** (cap rate = 6.0%, NOI = $30,000):
```
Land Value = $30,000 ÷ 6.0% = $500,000
```

**Sensitivity to cap rate variation**:

| Cap Rate | Land Value | % Change from Base |
|----------|-----------|-------------------|
| 5.0% | $600,000 | +20.0% |
| 5.5% | $545,455 | +9.1% |
| 6.0% | $500,000 | — |
| 6.5% | $461,538 | -7.7% |
| 7.0% | $428,571 | -14.3% |

**Analysis**:
- Each 0.5% change in cap rate = approximately ±8-10% change in land value
- Cap rate selection is **critical**—must be well-documented and defensible

**Range approach** (if cap rate uncertain):
- If cap rate justified as 5.8%-6.2%, use both extremes:
  - Low cap rate (5.8%): Land value = $517,241
  - High cap rate (6.2%): Land value = $483,871
  - **Value range**: $484,000-$517,000
  - **Concluded value**: $500,000 (midpoint)

---

## Land Value Calculation

Simple once market rent and cap rate are determined.

**Formula**:
```
Land Value = Net Operating Income ÷ Cap Rate
```

**NOI determination**:
1. **Gross Rental Income**: Market rent × applicable unit (annual, per acre, per sq ft)
2. **Less Vacancy**: Market vacancy rate for comparable properties
3. **Plus Other Income**: Ancillary income (parking, utilities, equipment)
4. **Equals Effective Gross Income**
5. **Less Operating Expenses**:
   - Property taxes
   - Insurance
   - Maintenance and repairs
   - Management fees
   - Utilities (if landlord-paid)
6. **Equals Net Operating Income**

### Telecom Ground Lease Example

**Gross rental income**:
- Market rent: $32,000/year
- Vacancy rate: 0% (ground leases have stable, long-term tenants)
- **Effective gross income**: $32,000

**Operating expenses**:
- Property taxes: $2,000/year
- Insurance: $800/year
- Maintenance/repairs: $1,200/year
- Management fee: 5% × $32,000 = $1,600/year
- **Total operating expenses**: $5,600/year

**Net Operating Income**:
```
NOI = $32,000 - $5,600 = $26,400/year
```

**Land value calculation** (using 6.0% cap rate):
```
Land Value = $26,400 ÷ 0.060 = $440,000
```

### Agricultural Lease Example

**Gross rental income**:
- Market rent: $260/acre/year
- Property size: 80 acres
- Vacancy/non-rent years: 5% (occasional equipment/crop failure)
- **Effective gross income**: $260 × 80 × 0.95 = $19,760/year

**Operating expenses**:
- Property taxes: $800/year (common on agricultural land)
- Landlord maintenance (fencing, drainage): $1,200/year
- Management: $500/year
- **Total operating expenses**: $2,500/year

**Net Operating Income**:
```
NOI = $19,760 - $2,500 = $17,260/year
```

**Land value calculation** (using 7.5% cap rate):
```
Land Value = $17,260 ÷ 0.075 = $230,133 (approximately $2,877/acre)
```

---

## Reconciliation with Sales Comparison Approach

For income-producing land, reconcile income approach conclusion with comparable sales when both approaches available.

### When Sales Comparison Differs from Income Approach

**Typical reconciliation scenarios**:

**Scenario 1: Income approach lower than sales comparison**
- Implied explanation: Buyers expect capital appreciation beyond NOI
- Common in: Agricultural land, developing markets, land held for speculation
- Reconciliation: If sales comparison (transaction-based) supported by 3+ recent sales, typically more reliable

**Scenario 2: Income approach higher than sales comparison**
- Implied explanation: Market undervalues income-producing potential, or comparable sales include non-income-producing attributes
- Common in: Illiquid markets, distressed sales, special-purpose land
- Reconciliation: Investigate why comparable sales are priced below NOI capitalization

**Example reconciliation**:

**Subject**: 80-acre Class 1 agricultural land

**Income approach**:
- Market rent: $260/acre
- NOI: $17,260 (as calculated above)
- Cap rate: 7.5%
- **Income approach value**: $230,133

**Sales comparison approach**:
- Comparable 1: 75 acres, $2,400/acre = $180,000
- Comparable 2: 100 acres, $2,500/acre = $250,000
- Comparable 3: 85 acres, $2,350/acre = $199,750
- **Sales comparison value range**: $180,000-$250,000 (midpoint $215,000)

**Reconciliation analysis**:
- Sales comparison: $215,000 ($2,688/acre)
- Income approach: $230,133 ($2,877/acre)
- Difference: +$15,133 (+7.0%)

**Interpretation**:
- Both approaches suggest land value in $215K-$230K range
- Sales comparison implies buyers value at $2,688/acre
- Income approach (7.5% cap) implies $2,877/acre
- **Reconciled value**: $220,000 (blend of both, reflecting some capital appreciation expectation beyond NOI)

---

## Sensitivity Analysis and Valuation Range

Critical for communicating uncertainty and defensibility.

### Single-Variable Sensitivity

Test impact of key assumptions on final land value.

**Example (Telecom ground lease)**:

**Base assumptions**:
- Market rent: $32,000/year
- Operating expenses: $5,600/year (17.5% of GRI)
- Cap rate: 6.0%
- **Base land value**: $440,000

**Sensitivity table (varying cap rate)**:

| Cap Rate | NOI | Land Value | % Change |
|----------|-----|-----------|----------|
| 5.0% | $26,400 | $528,000 | +20.0% |
| 5.5% | $26,400 | $480,000 | +9.1% |
| 6.0% | $26,400 | $440,000 | — |
| 6.5% | $26,400 | $406,154 | -7.7% |
| 7.0% | $26,400 | $377,143 | -14.3% |

**Sensitivity table (varying market rent)**:

| Market Rent | NOI | Land Value | % Change |
|------------|-----|-----------|----------|
| $28,000 | $22,400 | $373,333 | -15.2% |
| $30,000 | $24,400 | $406,667 | -7.6% |
| $32,000 | $26,400 | $440,000 | — |
| $34,000 | $28,400 | $473,333 | +7.6% |
| $36,000 | $30,400 | $506,667 | +15.2% |

**Sensitivity table (varying operating expense ratio)**:

| OpEx Ratio | NOI | Land Value | % Change |
|-----------|-----|-----------|----------|
| 15% | $27,200 | $453,333 | +3.0% |
| 17.5% | $26,400 | $440,000 | — |
| 20% | $25,600 | $426,667 | -3.0% |
| 25% | $24,000 | $400,000 | -9.1% |

**Analysis**:
- Land value **most sensitive** to cap rate (±0.5% = ±8-10% value change)
- Moderately sensitive to market rent (±6.3% change in rent = ±7.6% value change)
- Less sensitive to operating expense ratio (±2.5 points = ±3-9% value change)
- **Valuation priority**: Cap rate selection > Market rent > OpEx estimates

### Multi-Variable Scenarios

Combine changes in multiple assumptions for realistic scenarios.

**Example (Agricultural land)**:

**Base scenario** (most likely):
- Market rent: $260/acre
- Cap rate: 7.5%
- Property value: $230,133

**Conservative scenario** (lower rents, higher cap rate):
- Market rent: $240/acre (commodity downturn)
- Cap rate: 8.0% (higher risk premium)
- NOI: ($240 × 80 × 0.95) - $2,500 = $16,080
- **Property value**: $16,080 ÷ 0.080 = $201,000 (-12.6%)

**Optimistic scenario** (higher rents, lower cap rate):
- Market rent: $280/acre (commodity recovery, organic demand)
- Cap rate: 7.0% (improved investor appetite)
- NOI: ($280 × 80 × 0.95) - $2,500 = $19,840
- **Property value**: $19,840 ÷ 0.070 = $283,429 (+23.2%)

**Valuation range**:

| Scenario | Value | % of Base | Notes |
|----------|-------|----------|-------|
| Conservative | $201,000 | 87% | Commodity downturn |
| Most likely | $230,133 | 100% | Base assumptions |
| Optimistic | $283,429 | 123% | Commodity recovery |

**Range**: $201,000-$283,429
**Concluded value**: $230,000 (most likely scenario)

---

## Application by Land Use Type

### Telecom Sites (Ground Leases, Rooftop Agreements)

**Unique characteristics**:
- **Stable income**: Multi-decade leases, creditworthy major carriers (Verizon, AT&T, Bell, etc.)
- **Renewal certainty**: Carriers renew because infrastructure already sunk
- **Limited tenant pool**: Few operators, reduces competition for rent
- **Capital improvements**: Carrier builds/maintains towers (landlord receives improved asset post-lease)
- **Location specificity**: Site value tied to network coverage needs (not easily relocated)

**Market rent sources**:
- CoStar TowerWatch database (US market)
- Marcus & Millichap Telecom Real Estate Report
- Direct lease agreements for comparable tower sites
- Broker quotes from tower-focused intermediaries

**Typical telecom cap rates**:
- **Ground lease sites**: 5.5-7.0% (stable, creditworthy operators)
- **Rooftop sites**: 6.0-7.5% (higher risk of relocation)
- **Co-location (shared tower)**: 7.0-8.5% (multiple operators, variable occupancy)

**Example valuation**:

**Subject**: Ground lease parcel for cellular tower
- Signed lease with major carrier: $35,000/year
- 20-year term with 2 × 5-year renewal options
- 2% annual escalation
- Carrier maintains tower structure

**Market rent analysis**:
- Comparable 1: Similar site, same carrier, $32,000/year
- Comparable 2: Shared tower site (more risk), $28,000/year
- Conclusion: Market rent = $34,000/year (accounts for less restrictive operator profile vs. Comp 1)

**Operating expenses**:
- Property taxes: $1,500/year (rural location)
- Insurance: $600/year
- Maintenance: $800/year
- **Total OpEx**: $2,900/year

**NOI**: $34,000 - $2,900 = $31,100/year

**Cap rate selection**:
- Extracted from 2 comparable sales of ground leases: 6.2%, 6.0%
- Conclusion: Cap rate = 6.0%

**Land value**:
```
$31,100 ÷ 0.060 = $518,333
```

**Sensitivity** (±0.5% cap rate):
- At 5.5%: $565,455
- At 6.5%: $478,462
- **Value range**: $478,000-$565,000 (most likely $518,000)

---

### Agricultural Land (Row Crops, Pasture, Forage)

**Unique characteristics**:
- **Commodity price exposure**: Rent tied to (or indexed to) crop prices, weather
- **Annual renewal**: Most ag leases year-to-year with renewal
- **Multiple buyer pool**: Higher transaction volume, more market comparables
- **Capital appreciation**: Land value typically exceeds NOI yield (expect 2-4% cap rates)
- **Government programs**: Crop insurance, commodity payments, conservation programs

**Market rent sources**:
- **USDA Farmland Values**: Annual survey by NASS (National Agricultural Statistics Service)
- **Commodity extension services**: University of Illinois, Michigan State, Purdue agricultural extension
- **Farm Bureau agricultural rental surveys**: State-level data on pasture, crop rent
- **Federal crop insurance reports**: Rental values in APH (Average Production History) database
- **Published leases**: Examine actual farm lease agreements from county recordings

**Agricultural rent by use**:

**Row crop rent** (corn, soybeans, small grains):
- **Class 1 soil** (prime agricultural): $250-$350/acre/year
- **Class 2 soil** (good agricultural): $200-$280/acre/year
- **Class 3 soil** (fair agricultural): $150-$220/acre/year

**Pasture/hay rent**:
- **Improved pasture**: $100-$150/acre/year
- **Native/marginal pasture**: $50-$100/acre/year

**Formula-based adjustments**:
- **Commodity indexation**: If rent = corn price × conversion factor
  - Example: Rent = Corn Price ÷ 2 (if corn $6/bu, rent = $3/acre—extremely low, reflects commodity risk)
  - More realistic: Base rent + 50% of commodity upside (e.g., $180 base + 50% of commodity above $4/bu)

**Typical ag land cap rates** (reflecting commodity risk):
- **Non-indexed fixed rent**: 3.5-5.0%
- **Partially indexed rent**: 4.0-6.0%
- **Fully commodity-indexed rent**: 5.5-8.0% (landlord bears commodity risk, demands higher yield)

**Example valuation**:

**Subject**: 80-acre Class 2 agricultural land

**Market rent analysis**:
- County extension survey: $240/acre for similar Class 2 land
- Comparable lease 1: $235/acre fixed
- Comparable lease 2: $280/acre (formula: 50% upside commodity participation)
- Conclusion: Market rent = $245/acre (conservative, mostly fixed, modest upside potential)

**Per-acre NOI**:
- Gross rent: $245/acre
- Landlord maintenance (fencing, drainage): $15/acre/year
- Property tax estimate: $10/acre/year
- Management: $5/acre/year
- **Per-acre NOI**: $245 - $30 = $215/acre

**Cap rate selection**:
- Agricultural land extraction (3 recent sales): 2.8%, 3.1%, 2.9% (range 2.8-3.1%)
- **BUT**: Sales extraction likely reflects capital appreciation expectations
- **Income approach cap rate** (NOI-only): 4.5% (conservative)

**Per-acre value**:
```
$215/acre ÷ 0.045 = $4,778/acre
```

**Total land value** (80 acres):
```
$4,778 × 80 = $382,222
```

**Sales comparison check**:
- Recent sales: $2,500/acre, $2,600/acre, $2,450/acre
- Average: $2,517/acre
- **Sales value** (80 acres): $2,517 × 80 = $201,360

**Reconciliation**:
- Income approach (4.5% cap): $382,222
- Sales comparison: $201,360
- Difference: 90% (significant difference indicates different buyer motivations)

**Analysis**:
- Sales comparison reflects transaction prices (includes capital appreciation expectations, investment activity)
- Income approach (4.5% cap) implies expecting only NOI return, not capital appreciation
- **Reconciled value**: $290,000 (blend, assumes 3% annual appreciation + 4.5% NOI yield)

---

### Ground Leases (Fee Simple Land Under Long-Term Lease)

**Unique characteristics**:
- **Dual interests**: Fee owner and leaseholder have separate valuations
- **Fee interest valuation**: Reversion value + interim rent capitalized
- **Leasehold interest valuation**: Rent differential (market rent vs. lease rent) capitalized
- **Lease length**: Remaining lease term crucial (20-year lease much different from 99-year)
- **Renewal/reversion**: At lease end, does fee holder regain possession of improvements?

**Fee interest valuation approach**:

```
Fee Value = [Interim Rent ÷ Cap Rate] + [Reversion Value ÷ (1 + Cap Rate)^n]
```

Where:
- Interim Rent = Current ground lease rent
- Cap Rate = Discount rate for land
- Reversion Value = Estimated value of land at lease end (fee regains possession)
- n = Years to lease expiration

**Example (Shopping center ground lease)**:

**Subject**: Fee simple interest in land under 25-year shopping center lease

**Lease terms**:
- Annual rent: $50,000 (fixed, no escalation)
- Remaining term: 25 years
- Tenant: Established retail operator (good credit)
- Upon expiration: Fee owner regains clear possession of land

**Interim rent capitalization**:
- **Safe approach**: Capitalize interim rent at lower cap rate (secure income stream)
- Cap rate: 5.5% (lower risk, contractual rent)
- Value of interim rent stream: $50,000 ÷ 0.055 = $909,091

**Reversion value projection**:
- Current land value (with lease): $909,091
- Expected land appreciation: 2.5% annually for 25 years
- Multiplier: (1.025)^25 = 1.85
- Projected fee value at lease end: $909,091 × 1.85 = $1,681,818

**Discounting reversion**:
- Discount rate for reversion (higher risk, 25-year projection): 6.5%
- Reversion discount factor: 1 ÷ (1.065)^25 = 0.1842
- Present value of reversion: $1,681,818 × 0.1842 = $309,788

**Fee interest value**:
```
Fee Value = $909,091 + $309,788 = $1,218,879
```

---

## Integration with Related Appraisal Skills

### Easement Valuation Methods (Complementary)

**Synergy**: Income approach for perpetual easement income (telecom sites, utility corridors with rental value)

**Income approach to easement value**:
1. Estimate annual easement income (telecom carrier payment, agricultural rent loss capitalized)
2. Select cap rate appropriate to easement permanence and risk
3. Capitalize to land value

**Example**: Perpetual transmission easement with agricultural income loss
- Agricultural productivity loss: 20% of land value = 20% of $250/acre = $50/acre/year
- Cap rate for perpetual easement: 4.5% (very long-term, low risk)
- Easement value: $50 ÷ 0.045 = $1,111/acre

---

### Comparable Sales Adjustment Methodology (Complementary)

**Synergy**: Use sales comparison to validate cap rates extracted from market transactions

**Process**:
1. Identify 3+ comparable income-producing land sales
2. Extract cap rates from each transaction: NOI ÷ Sale Price
3. Reconcile to single cap rate range
4. Apply to subject's NOI to determine land value
5. Compare income approach conclusion to unadjusted sales prices (reconcile differences)

---

## Land Capitalization Calculator

**Tool**: `land_capitalization_calculator.py` (located in same folder as this SKILL.md)

**Capabilities**:
- Market rent analysis and reconciliation
- Multiple cap rate derivation methods (extraction, band of investment, build-up)
- NOI calculation with customizable operating expenses
- Land value calculation with sensitivity analysis
- Comparison to comparable sales approach
- PDF report generation

**Input format** (JSON):

```json
{
  "subject_property": {
    "property_type": "telecom_ground_lease",
    "location": "Chicago, IL",
    "size_acres": 0.5,
    "valuation_date": "2024-11-17"
  },
  "market_rent_analysis": {
    "comparable_rents": [
      {
        "rent_annual": 32000,
        "adjustments": {"term_adjustment": 0},
        "source": "Similar tower site, same carrier"
      }
    ],
    "concluded_market_rent": 32000
  },
  "operating_expenses": {
    "property_tax": 2000,
    "insurance": 800,
    "maintenance": 1200,
    "management_fee_percent": 5
  },
  "cap_rate_analysis": {
    "method": "market_extraction",
    "extracted_rates": [0.060, 0.062, 0.058],
    "concluded_cap_rate": 0.060
  }
}
```

**Usage**:

```bash
cd /workspaces/lease-abstract/.claude/skills/income-approach-expert/
python land_capitalization_calculator.py input.json --output results.json --verbose
```

**Output**:
- NOI calculation with expense breakdown
- Cap rate selection justification
- Land value conclusion
- Sensitivity tables (±0.5% cap rate, ±5% market rent)
- Reconciliation with comparable sales (if provided)
- PDF report suitable for appraisal assignments

---

## Key Assumptions and Documentation

**For defensible appraisal work, document**:

1. **Market rent conclusion**:
   - 3+ comparable rents identified and reconciled
   - Adjustments for term length, escalation, renewal provisions
   - Source and timing of rent evidence

2. **Operating expenses**:
   - Breakdown by category (property tax, insurance, maintenance, management)
   - Estimate methodology (% of GRI, per-unit costs, market survey)
   - Justification for landlord vs. tenant responsibility

3. **Capitalization rate**:
   - Primary method (extraction, band of investment, build-up)
   - Supporting data (comparable transactions, mortgage terms, risk analysis)
   - Sensitivity analysis showing impact of ±0.5% variation
   - Comparison to published cap rate surveys (if applicable)

4. **Highest and best use**:
   - Why income approach most appropriate for subject's use
   - Why not other approaches (cost approach impractical for land; sales comparison insufficient comparables, etc.)

5. **Limitations**:
   - Lease renewal uncertainty
   - Commodity price risk (agricultural)
   - Operator creditworthiness (telecom)
   - Lack of comparable transaction data (if applicable)

---

## Summary: When to Use Income Approach for Land Valuation

**This skill activates when you**:
- Value telecom ground leases or carrier site agreements
- Analyze agricultural land rental income and capitalization
- Evaluate fee interests in ground leases with uncertain reversion
- Estimate easement income value from perpetual rental streams
- Build cap rate from market extraction, band of investment, or build-up methodology
- Capitalize land rent to estimate land value in income-producing scenarios
- Reconcile income approach conclusions with sales comparison approach
- Perform sensitivity analysis on cap rate and market rent assumptions
- Document market rent analysis and NOI calculations for defensible appraisals
