Unlock $750-$2,000 Per Acre in potential TAx Deductions

Recent ag land purchase? Section 180 deductions may apply — we manage testing and reporting.

BirdDog Section 180 residual soil fertility deduction — qualify for $750–$2,000 per acre in tax savings

1 Million

Partner Acreage

$3M

Revenue Generated

across participating properties

$30M

Taxes Saved

across participating properties

$40,000

Avg. Annual Revenue

per property

Section 180 Eligibility — BirdDog
Step 1 of 4 25%

Section 180 Eligibility Check

Find out if your land qualifies for IRS Section 180 deductions. No contact info required at this stage.

Please select your state.
Please enter your county.
Please enter your acreage.
Must be within the last 10 years Please enter a valid 4-digit year.
Please select an option.

Your information is private and will never be sold or shared.

Your land could earn more — BirdDog shows you how.
We help landowners uncover income opportunities, from tax deductions to conservation projects.

Start with a free Section 180 estimate — many qualify for $750–$2,000 per acre in deductions.

‍Land purchased within the past 10 years may qualify for a powerful but often overlooked tax deduction under Section 180. This provision allows landowners to deduct the residual fertility already in their soil — nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium that hold measurable value.

BirdDog makes it easy to document eligibility, quantify those nutrients, and handle the entire process from start to finish — turning soil health into real financial gain.

  • Verified soil fertility testing

  • Science-backed soil valuations

  • CPA-ready reports

What John Learned After Testing His Soil With BirdDog

BirdDog land intelligence platform dashboard — view land data, maps, and revenue opportunities in one place
The soil values came in a lot higher than what we had suspected. I was amazed — and from what I understand, a lot of other people have had the same thing happen. They get their soil samples back and they’re just amazed at what these samples show.
John King
Landowner in Tennessee