Bill Gates owns 1 of every 4000 acres of US farmland. Why the tech billionaire loves traditional agriculture investing

Bill Gates speaks onstage at the Bloomberg Philanthropies Global Forum 2025 at The Plaza Hotel on September 24, 2025 in New York City.
Bryan Bedder / Getty

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Seventeen years ago, Bill Gates left his role at Microsoft, the company he founded, to focus on philanthropic efforts through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, providing billions of dollars in capital to noteworthy projects each year.

With a net worth of $117 billion, according to Bloomberg (1), Gates’ portfolio is widely diversified. There’s his Microsoft stock, of course, but the rest of his fortune is spread out among a number of private interests, including a unique one — U.S. farmland.

Recent estimates indicate that Bill Gates owns over 250,000 acres of farmland across the United States and is the nation’s largest private farmland owner (2). Gates himself said in a 2021 Reddit AMA that he owns roughly 1/4000 of all U.S. farmland (3).

Tariff restrictions and Trump’s trade war with China might have affected Gates’ farmland fortune, as farmers across the country lost access to this valuable market. China stopped buying American crops in the spring of 2025 after Trump announced tariff actions (4), and in response, the administration has announced a $12 billion federal aid package to help farmers who have been impacted by the trade war (5).

So the question is: Why is Bill Gates investing so heavily in this asset class? Here’s what to consider when it comes to investing in farmland.

Farmland is a broad asset class encompassing land that can be farmed. It’s an attractive investment for those looking to hedge against inflationary periods.

According to an August 2025 report from Farm Bureau, the value of U.S. farmland has reached a record $4,350 per acre, a 4.3% year-over-year increase (6). The value of farmland also typically rises with inflation, so despite market uncertainty due to tariffs, land values have continued to grow.

The important thing about investing in physical farmland is that the price tags associated with large farms (or even small to medium-sized farms) can be massive. These are also assets that aren’t as easy to get financing for, particularly for investors and those without direct farming expertise.

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