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    Tuesday, May 12
    Radio TandilRadio Tandil
    You are at:Home » Why the Richest YouTubers Are Secretly Moving Their Fortunes into Farmland
    Fortunes into Farmland
    Fortunes into Farmland
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    Why the Richest YouTubers Are Secretly Moving Their Fortunes into Farmland

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil6 April 2026Updated:5 May 2026No Comments6 Mins Read51 Views
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    Behind the scenes of YouTube’s wealthiest circles, something subtly peculiar is taking place. The subscriber numbers continue to rise, the cameras continue to record, and the thumbnails continue to be loud, but the money? The funds are going in an unexpected direction. Not interested in beachfront mansions, venture capital funds, or cryptocurrency wallets. It is entering the soil. Real, unglamorous, muddy farmland.

    The majority of their audiences might not know. Why would they do that? When a 25-year-old watches a Mr. Beast challenge video, agricultural land in Iowa is not on their mind. However, those who are counting the revenue checks after those videos reach 100 million views are giving it a lot of thought.

    CategoryDetails
    TopicYouTuber Farmland Investment Trend
    Key FiguresMrBeast (Jimmy Donaldson), Logan Paul, Mark Rober, and similar high-net-worth content creators
    IndustryDigital Media / Agriculture / Alternative Investments
    Trend OriginPost-2018, accelerating significantly post-2020
    Notable Billionaire PrecedentsBill Gates (~269,000 acres), Jeff Bezos (~400,000 acres), Warren Buffett, George Soros
    Average Farmland Return (1992–2022)10.71% annually
    U.S. Farmland Value Increase (2022)10.2% — outpacing 8% inflation rate
    Global Food Demand Projection50% increase needed by 2050 (FAO)
    Reference WebsiteAmerican Farmland Trust

    Even though it hasn’t generated much attention, the trend among extremely wealthy investors has been apparent for years. After traditional real estate and art, farmland was the third most popular investment among billionaires, according to the Knight Frank Billionaire Report.

    In less than ten years, Bill Gates quietly amassed more than 269,000 acres of farmland spread over eighteen U.S. states, cultivating everything from potatoes used in McDonald’s fries to onions and carrots. In Texas alone, Jeff Bezos owns about 400,000 acres. These aren’t small-scale farms. They are long-term, well-thought-out financial positions.

    Even though the discussions take place in private meetings rather than in monetized vlogs, YouTube’s highest earners are now using the same reasoning. When you sit with it, it makes an uncomfortable sense. Revenue from advertisements is erratic. Platform algorithms change without prior notice. Sponsorship agreements become scarce.

    Even though they don’t express it publicly, a creator who currently has 50 million subscribers may discover that the landscape has completely changed in five years. Quarterly earnings calls don’t affect farmland. A competitor’s introduction of a superior product does not cause it to lose thirty percent of its value. It simply sits there, enjoying itself.

    Averaging 10.71% annually between 1992 and 2022, farmland outperformed most private real estate benchmarks and gold, which averaged 5.42%. U.S. farmland values increased by 10.2% in 2022 while inflation was eating away at portfolios at 8%. Financial advisors lean forward in their seats when they see that correlation to the Consumer Price Index, which stands at a startling 0.97 between 2020 and 2022. The appeal is easy to comprehend for someone with twenty or thirty million dollars in digital earnings.

    This generation of creators seems to have learned a valuable lesson from witnessing early internet successes fade away. Not everyone who became a YouTube millionaire in the mid-2010s did so smoothly. During the wrong market window, some people squandered money on overpriced real estate, luxury cars, and unsuccessful startups.

    The more astute ones began to notice the farmland purchases that were subtly showing up in land registry records and regulatory filings as they observed the billionaire class rather than the celebrity class. There is a slow, almost geological quality to watching this pattern develop. These purchases are not made on a whim. They serve as hedges.

    Farmland’s supply-demand dynamics are nearly irresistibly persuasive. According to the Food and Agricultural Organization, in order to keep up with population growth, global food production must rise by more than 50% before 2050. As a result of industrial development, urban sprawl, and climate change, usable agricultural land is actively declining.

    It is not a difficult investment thesis to meet growing demand with limited supply. It is the oldest one in existence. Because someone in their financial circle eventually drew that equation on a whiteboard and let it speak for itself, the wealthiest YouTubers are investing in farmland.

    Of the 911 million acres of farmland in the United States, about 39% is rented to working farmers, and 80% of that rented land is owned by non-farmers. The landlord model is simple: buy the land, lease it to operators, wait for the underlying asset to increase in value, and collect returns from cash rental income that average about 2.5% per year.John Piotti, CEO of American Farmland Trust, stated bluntly, “It’s an asset with increasing value.” “It has great intrinsic value and beyond that, it is a limited resource.” It’s not a difficult pitch. It’s just land acting in its natural way.

    It’s not always the case that content producers who invest in farmland go on to become farmers. They are following in the footsteps of George Soros, who bought more than a million acres in Argentina with the declared intention of reviving the nation’s agricultural capacity, or The Grain Belt Express, a joint venture between Soros, Bill Gates, Carlos Slim, and Warren Buffett that raised about two billion dollars for extensive farmland purchases. These individuals are proficient in one type of compounding. They are now treating soil with the same patience.

    It’s still unclear if creator finance circles will see a significant acceleration of this trend or if it will continue to be a subtle undercurrent. Although comparable opportunities exist elsewhere, farmland in some U.S. markets currently costs more than $4,000 per acre on average. For example, farmland in Alberta, Canada, has been reported to cost about $3,164 per acre.

    The distance between markets is an opportunity for creators who are expanding globally. The growing floor on agricultural land values indicates that the window of opportunity for entry at lower prices may not remain open indefinitely for those who choose to remain domestic.

    A generation that made its fortune from attention and algorithmic favor is subtly establishing roots in something that predates the internet by several millennia, which has a somewhat poetic quality. Engagement rates don’t matter to the soil. There isn’t an ad revenue share program. Demonetization does not occur. Perhaps that’s precisely the point.

    Fortunes into Farmland
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