Significant rural property transactions, advised by a team that understands land, water, family and structure as one.
Quinn M&A advises landholding families, primary producers, investors and agribusiness acquirers on rural property transactions from $5 million to $200 million. Family-owned grazing and cropping operations, irrigated horticulture and water-rights-led holdings, intergenerational estates and corporate agribusiness sales — supported by senior, dual-qualified leadership and an integrated specialist team.
In rural property, value sits across land, water, operation and family. The same adviser shapes valuation, CGT position, water-entitlement strategy, succession and legal drafting — so the deal serves the next generation as well as it serves the transaction.
Confidential. No obligation. We respond within 1 business day.
Mid-market rural property, agribusiness and water-entitlement transactions across Australia.
Water entitlements valued, separated or sold with the land — deliberately, not by default.
CGT concessions, intergenerational transfer and family equalisation considered alongside the deal.
Michael Quinn — Chartered Accountant and Solicitor — personally leads every engagement.
Rural property transactions are rarely undone by price. They are undone by family arrangements, water, and tax that weren't designed together.
Rural property transactions live across more dimensions than any other asset class. Value is driven by land carrying capacity, soil and climate, water entitlements and allocations, operating performance and improvements. Tax outcome is driven by CGT, primary production averaging, farm management deposits, intergenerational transfer rules and small business concessions — often turning on history, structure and active asset use stretching back decades. Family arrangements decide who is selling, who is staying, and how the proceeds are equalised between heirs on and off the land. Pull any of those apart, and the others move.
Most rural property advice is fragmented. A rural agent handles the campaign and the headline price. A property valuer prices the land. The accountant addresses tax late. The solicitor drafts in response to terms already agreed. Water is treated as a feature of the listing rather than its own asset. Family arrangements are left until after contracts. Each adviser is competent in isolation — but the outcome sits in how they fit together, and that's usually where it leaks.
The strongest rural property outcomes consistently come from advice that holds the parts together: one adviser leading the mandate, a specialist team supporting it, and land, water, tax, family arrangements and legal positioning aligned from the first conversation through to completion.
One advisory relationship. Land, water, tax and family arrangements held together from the first conversation.
Most rural property advisers come from one discipline — a rural agent, a livestock and stations specialist, or a country accountant working in isolation from the legal and tax structuring. Quinn M&A is structured differently. Michael Quinn is a Chartered Accountant and a Solicitor admitted to the Supreme Court of NSW. The same firm advises on valuation, CGT and primary production tax, water-entitlement strategy, succession, intergenerational transfer, family equalisation and legal drafting. The integrated specialist team handles rural property and agribusiness transactions for families and investors across the Australian mid-market.
For rural property in particular, that integration matters. Multi-generational holdings carry low cost-base CGT exposure, decades of structural decisions and family expectations that need to be addressed together. Water entitlements often sit in different names and trusts to the land — and can be sold separately, transferred internally, or retained. Family equalisation between heirs on and off the land needs to be designed before contracts, not improvised afterwards. The judgement holds together because the disciplines do.
Six rural property transaction types — handled by the same team.
Every rural property transaction sits at a slightly different intersection of land, water, family, operation and structure. We advise on the full range — from third-party family sales of intergenerational holdings, through internal succession and equalisation, to corporate agribusiness disposals and pre-transaction restructuring.
Selling a long-held family property outside the family. Low cost-base CGT exposure, small business 15-year exemption eligibility, water-entitlement strategy and equalisation arrangements addressed before market.
Sell-sideTransferring land, water and the operating business to the next generation. Structure, stamp duty concessions, intergenerational transfer rules and on-farm/off-farm equalisation designed together.
Advisory · FamilyOne family branch staying on the land, others taking proceeds. Valuation, partial transfer, internal buyout, trust restructure and water-entitlement allocation handled with discretion and clarity.
Advisory · Sell-sideDisposal to a neighbouring or expanding family producer. Off-market, confidential approach to a defined buyer set, with land, water, lease and operating arrangements positioned to suit a strategic acquirer.
Sell-sideSale of a rural enterprise to a corporate operator, super fund, institutional ag investor or vertically-integrated processor. FIRB position, structure, water rights and operating data presented to an institutional standard.
Sell-sideRestructuring entity, water holdings, leases and family arrangements before a transaction — to align CGT concessions, primary production tax position, FMD treatment and equalisation outcome with the deal that's actually being planned.
AdvisoryA structured process for rural property. Calibrated to the land, the water and the family in play.
The goal is not activity — it is leverage, clarity and a clean path to completion. Every stage is designed to protect your confidentiality and the family's interests, maintain negotiating momentum, and ensure land, water, tax, succession and legal positions move forward together.
Understand the asset, the operating business, the family context, water position, objectives and timeline — and what a successful outcome looks like for each generation involved.
Establish land valuation, water-entitlement strategy, operating performance story and improvements. Decide what is sold together, what is separated, and what is retained.
Test CGT concessions, the 15-year exemption, primary production averaging and FMD position. Settle intergenerational transfer treatment, equalisation and entity structure. The shape of the deal is decided here, not later.
Controlled, confidential outreach to the right buyer set — neighbouring producers, consolidating family operators, corporate agribusiness, institutional ag investors, syndicates or processors. NDAs and staged disclosure from day one.
Evaluate offers and negotiate terms with land, water, tax and family dimensions considered together. Coordinate property, water, environmental, operational, legal and tax diligence so findings translate into structure and drafting.
Drive to signing and settlement with clear accountability — conditions, water transfers, plant and equipment, livestock, FIRB clearance where relevant and post-completion family arrangements all in hand.
In rural property, the difference between a clean deal and a costly one usually lives in stages 02 and 03 — getting land, water, CGT concessions, succession and family equalisation aligned before the market sees anything. That is where we spend the time.
The questions we ask early — because they decide the deal later.
Rural property transactions are won or lost on six recurring questions. Each one sits at the intersection of land, water, tax, family and legal — and each one needs an integrated answer before it gets locked in by an offer letter or a family conversation that can't be unsaid.
Water entitlements are separable, tradable and often held in different names to the land. They can be sold with the property, sold separately, retained or transferred internally — each path has different valuation, CGT and stamp duty consequences. The decision is rarely just a feature of the listing.
Some rural mandates are clear third-party sales. Many are internal — one branch buying others out, a generational transfer with an off-farm equalisation, or a partial sale that funds succession. Knowing which transaction this actually is decides every structural choice that follows.
Long-held, low-cost-base rural property often qualifies for the small business 15-year CGT exemption, the active asset and retirement concessions, or the 50% reduction — depending on entity structure, ownership history, turnover tests and active asset use. Eligibility is the single largest lever on net proceeds for many families. It needs to be tested early, not assumed late.
In multi-generational holdings, one or two children often stay on the land while siblings have moved off. Equalisation between them — through proceeds, debt, life-interest arrangements, family trust restructure or insurance — is rarely solved by the headline price alone. It needs to be designed before contracts.
Rural buyers behave very differently. A consolidating neighbour will pay for adjacency and scale. A corporate agribusiness or super fund will pay for operating data, water security and institutional-grade structure. A lifestyle buyer will pay for amenity. The right campaign — off-market, targeted, or broad — depends on which set of buyers this asset actually fits.
Land in one entity, water in another, operating business in a third, family trust over the top — typically inherited rather than designed. A restructure 12 to 24 months before a transaction can materially change CGT outcome, water-rights position, FMD treatment and equalisation. Where time allows, it is one of the strongest interventions an integrated adviser can make.
Significant rural property transactions deserve advice that holds land, water, tax and family together. Start with a confidential conversation.
Whether you are selling an intergenerational family property, transferring land to the next generation, equalising between siblings, selling to a neighbouring producer or to corporate agribusiness, or restructuring ahead of a future transaction — the right early advice can materially improve the structure, the tax position, the family outcome and the deal itself. We respond within one business day.
Long-held family property going to market. 15-year CGT exemption, water-rights strategy and equalisation resolved before campaign.
Start the conversation Succession & equalisation · Advisory Transferring or restructuring within the familyIntergenerational transfer, partial buyout or family equalisation — designed at the kitchen table, supported by structure and tax.
Start the conversation Corporate & institutional · $5m–$200m Selling to agribusiness or institutional capitalCorporate operator, super fund or vertically-integrated processor. FIRB position, water security and operating data positioned to an institutional standard.
Start the conversationConfidential. No obligation. Replies within one business day.
