easement-valuation-methods

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Use when valuing utility transmission easements, pipeline corridors, rail/transit corridors, access easements, telecom sites, or temporary construction easements. Apply percentage of fee method, income capitalization, before/after paired sales, or rate-of-return for TCEs. Key terms: percentage of fee, income capitalization, paired sales, discount rate, agricultural rent, TCE.

reggiechan74 By reggiechan74 schedule Updated 5/15/2026

name: easement-valuation-methods description: Use when valuing utility transmission easements, pipeline corridors, rail/transit corridors, access easements, telecom sites, or temporary construction easements. Apply percentage of fee method, income capitalization, before/after paired sales, or rate-of-return for TCEs. Key terms: percentage of fee, income capitalization, paired sales, discount rate, agricultural rent, TCE.

Scope

This is the canonical easement-valuation skill in the marketplace. Other skills (notably right-of-way-expert) reference this skill rather than duplicate its methodology. Keep it self-contained and authoritative.

Professional Standards Compliance

Methodology is compliant with USPAP 2024 (USA), CUSPAP 2024 (Canada), Yellow Book / UASFLA (US federal acquisitions), and IVS 2022 (international, IVS 105).

Core principles:

  • Before-and-After Method is the preferred approach for partial takings and easements.
  • Develop scope of work appropriate to assignment complexity, intended use, and jurisdiction.
  • Analyze highest and best use in both Before and After conditions.
  • Reconcile approaches through reasoned weighting, never simple averaging.
  • Extract easement percentages from paired sales empirically when data allows.

For the full standards treatment, reconciliation framework (Steps 1-5), adjustment hierarchy, and related-skill integration, see compliance-framework.md.

The Five Valuation Methods

# Method When to Use Core Formula
1 Before-and-After Preferred for partial takings, federal acquisitions (Yellow Book), Ontario expropriations, most USPAP/CUSPAP assignments Value Before − Value After = Compensation
2 Percentage of Fee Quick estimate; published ranges available for the corridor type; supplemental support for other methods Easement Value = Fee Value × Easement % × Affected Area
3 Income Capitalization Revenue-generating easements (telecom, agricultural rent loss measurable); perpetual duration; reliable cap rate Easement Value = Annual Income Loss ÷ Cap Rate
4 Before/After Paired Sales (market extraction) Excellent paired sales available; only difference is the easement; statistical validation possible Easement % = (Comp w/o Easement − Comp w/ Easement) ÷ Comp w/o Easement
5 Rate-of-Return (TCEs only) Temporary construction easements when rental market data unavailable TCE Value = Fee Value × Annual Rate × (Days ÷ 365) + Damage + Business Losses

Method 1 — Before-and-After (Preferred for Partial Takings)

The federal method, preferred under USPAP/CUSPAP for partial takings:

Compensation = Value of entire property BEFORE easement
             − Value of entire property AFTER easement

Equivalent to the Take-Plus-Damages framework (direct land taken + severance damages to remainder), which is sometimes required by client/jurisdiction for itemized reporting. The two frameworks are mathematically equivalent when properly applied. See worked-examples.md §2 for a side-by-side numerical comparison.

For severance damages to the remainder parcel (access loss, shape irregularity, farm operation disruption), use the severance-damages-quantification skill.

Method 2 — Percentage of Fee

Historical market analysis shows a 5-35% range by easement type. Quick reference:

Easement Type Typical % of Fee
Access easements 5-15%
Utility transmission (legacy ranges) 10-25%
Pipeline corridors (legacy ranges) 15-30%
Modern IRWA-aligned calculator ranges 25-40%+

Full base-percentage tables (by voltage, rail type, pipeline product, and corridor sub-type) plus all domain-specific adjustments live in compensation-tables.md.

Method 3 — Income Capitalization

Convert annual rental income (or productivity loss) to capital value using a cap rate adjusted for easement permanence and risk:

Easement Value = Annual Income Loss ÷ Capitalization Rate

Discount rate selection (full table in compensation-tables.md §5):

  • Perpetual government/utility: 4-5%
  • Perpetual private party: 5-6%
  • Long-term: +1% above perpetual
  • Medium-term: +2% above perpetual
  • Temporary (1-5 yr): valued as lump-sum, not capitalized

Adjustments: +0.5-1% for uncertain renewal; +1-2% for risky operators; -0.5% for government guarantees; -0.5-1% for indexed escalations.

Agricultural-rent and telecom-site rental tables are in compensation-tables.md §5; worked example for agricultural land is in worked-examples.md §1.

Method 4 — Before/After Paired Sales (Market Extraction)

Ideal paired sales criteria:

  • Same market area (within 5-10 km)
  • Same highest and best use
  • Same size class (±25% land area)
  • Similar physical characteristics (topography, soil, access, services)
  • Sale timing within 12-18 months
  • Only difference: presence/absence of easement

Extraction:

Easement % of total property = (Adjusted no-easement value − Adjusted w-easement value) ÷ no-easement value
Easement % of affected acres   = Total-property % ÷ (Affected acres ÷ Total acres)

For 10+ paired sales, use hedonic regression:

Sale Price = β₀ + β₁(Acres) + β₂(Soil Class) + β₃(Frontage)
           + β₄(Easement Presence) + β₅(Easement Acres) + ε

Implied easement percentage = β₅ ÷ fee-simple per-acre value. Statistical thresholds: R² > 0.70, p < 0.05, VIF < 10.

Full adjustment grid, regression interpretation, and a worked extraction are in worked-examples.md §3.

For rigorous comparable-sales adjustment methodology, use the comparable-sales-adjustment-methodology skill.

Method 5 — Rate-of-Return (TCEs)

Temporary construction easements use rental value for duration plus restoration costs, not capitalized perpetual income.

Preferred — Fair Market Rental: research comparable land rents, apply to affected area, prorate for duration, add damage / restoration / business losses.

Fallback — Rate-of-Return (when rental market data unavailable):

TCE Value = (Affected Fee Simple Value × Annual Rate × Days ÷ 365)
          + Physical Damage Restoration Costs
          + Business / Operational Losses

Annual rates (compensation-tables.md §5):

  • 6% — conservative, government agencies (Austin, TX precedent)
  • 10% — industry standard for private utility projects (most common)
  • 12%+ — high-disruption sites, premium locations, lengthy duration

Duration adjustments: short (<30 days) — daily rate may exceed prorated annual due to fixed setup costs; medium (3-12 months) — standard prorated calculation; long (1-3 years) — may approach permanent easement value; apply 2-4%/yr escalation.

Worked TCE examples (agricultural rental method and industrial rate-of-return method, plus 3-year escalation calculation) are in worked-examples.md §4.

For construction-period noise / dust / vibration / traffic impacts, use the injurious-affection-assessment skill.

Specialized Calculators

Three domain calculators wrap the shared core (easement_calculator_base.py) with corridor-specific base percentages, adjustments, and reconciliation weights.

Calculator Required Param Default Reconciliation Weights
hydro_easement_calculator.py (transmission lines) voltage_kv 50% % of fee / 30% income / 20% before-after
rail_easement_calculator.py (rail / transit) rail_type (+ optional rail_alignment) 50% % of fee / 20% income / 30% before-after
pipeline_easement_calculator.py (pipelines / subsurface) pipeline_type 45% % of fee / 30% income / 25% before-after

Full base percentages and adjustment factors per calculator are in compensation-tables.md §§1-3.

Shared core capabilities (easement_calculator_base.py): TCE rate-of-return, income capitalization, before/after comparison, dynamic reconciliation, sensitivity analysis.

Canonical Example — 230 kV Transmission Easement Across Class 1 Farmland

Subject: 15-acre permanent easement on 100-acre Class 1 farm; fee simple value $12,000/acre.

Approach Calculation Indicated Value
Percentage of fee 15 ac × $12,000/ac × 15% $27,000
Income capitalization 15 ac × $60/ac annual loss ÷ 4.5% cap $20,000
Before/after paired sales One paired-sale analysis (adjusted) $24,000

Weighting 40% / 30% / 30% → weighted average $24,000; range $20,000-$27,000; final reconciled value $25,000 after sensitivity testing (cap rate ±1%, percentage ±5%).

Full reasoning, sensitivity check, and a parallel before-and-after vs. take-plus-damages comparison are in worked-examples.md §§2 and 5.

Key Terms

  • Before-and-After Method — value of entire property before easement minus value after easement; preferred under USPAP/CUSPAP/Yellow Book for partial takings.
  • Take-Plus-Damages Method — direct land taken plus severance damages to remainder; mathematically equivalent to Before-and-After when properly applied.
  • Percentage of Fee — easement value expressed as a percentage of underlying fee simple land value.
  • Income Capitalization — converts annual income loss to capital value using risk-adjusted cap rate.
  • Paired Sales (Market Extraction) — empirical extraction of easement % impact from comparable sales differing only in easement presence.
  • Discount Rate / Capitalization Rate — rate used to convert future income streams to present value; varies by easement permanence and operator risk.
  • Agricultural Rent — annual rent per acre for comparable farmland; basis for productivity-loss income capitalization.
  • TCE (Temporary Construction Easement) — short-duration easement valued by fair-market rental or rate-of-return method, not capitalized perpetual income.
  • Rate-of-Return Method — TCE valuation applying annual rate (typically 10%) to affected fee simple value, prorated for duration.
  • Severance Damages — damages to the remainder parcel from access loss, shape irregularity, or operational disruption. See severance-damages-quantification.
  • Injurious Affection — construction or proximity impacts (noise, dust, vibration, traffic). See injurious-affection-assessment.
  • Reconciliation — reasoned weighting of multiple approaches to a single value indication; not a simple average.

Reference Files in This Directory

  • compensation-tables.md — base percentages and adjustments for hydro, rail, pipeline calculators; agricultural rent and telecom rental tables; discount and TCE rate tables.
  • worked-examples.md — detailed walkthroughs per method (income cap, before-after vs. take-plus-damages, paired sales with adjustment grid and regression, TCE rental and rate-of-return, full reconciliation example, end-to-end transmission workflow).
  • compliance-framework.md — USPAP/CUSPAP/Yellow Book/IVS deep dive; reconciliation framework (Steps 1-5); adjustment hierarchy; related-skill integration.
  • VERSION.md — version history (do not edit unless updating versioning).
  • Calculators: hydro_easement_calculator.py, rail_easement_calculator.py, pipeline_easement_calculator.py, easement_calculator_base.py, plus input schemas and tests.
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npx skills add https://github.com/reggiechan74/vp-real-estate --skill easement-valuation-methods
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