North Carolina's Forestry Present-Use Valuation (PUV) Property Tax Program Woodland Owner Notes

North Carolina owners of soundly managed commercial forestland can qualify for property tax reductions through the state’s forestry present-use property tax program. To be eligible for forestry present-use valuation, qualified forestland must be actively engaged in the commercial growing of trees under sound management (NC General Statues 105 277.2-277.7). Commercial management of trees often entails a thinning, partial, or complete harvest of trees (as prescribed in the forest management plan filed with the county tax office). Numerous legislative changes, court decisions, and property tax commission rulings have altered the PUV program over the years. This document covers the major provisions of the law, forestry qualifications, and eligibility requirements for deferring property taxes through the forestry PUV program.

This publication provides a brief overview of a complicated law. The interpretations are based on administrative guidance from the N.C. Department of Revenue as of January 2019. This general discussion addresses most common aspects of this program and its originating statues from 1974. For answers to specific questions, contact your county property tax office, a tax attorney, or the state Department of Revenue. You can also review the Present-Use Value Program Guide on the NC Department of Revenue website.

What Is Forestry Present-Use Value?

Forestry PUV is the value of a tract of land used as forestland, based solely on its ability to produce income from timber growth assuming an average level of management. A county tax assessor calculates the associated property tax by applying the current tax rate to the use-value of the land. In this instance, the current use is producing timber, rather than the market value, which is based on the highest and best use of the property. The difference in the market value and the use-value is deferred until the property no longer qualifies or is removed from the program. In many counties, the tax savings from enrolling in the PUV program are substantial and allow landowners to maintain their forestland despite development pressure.

Acreage Requirements

The qualifying piece of land must have at least 20 acres of forestland in timber production. This constitutes the “parent tract.” Once the 20-acre parent tract qualifies, smaller tracts may be brought under use-value as long as the following conditions are met:

Forestland is not required to produce annual income—a stipulation for agriculture and horticulture properties.

Who Qualifies?