One of the less-discussed advantages of owning freehold agricultural land in Karnataka is that it is a recognised collateral asset — meaning you can borrow against it if you need liquidity without selling the land itself. For investors who have built a meaningful farmland position in Coorg and want to access capital for a business opportunity, a property purchase, or a personal need without liquidating their agricultural asset, this option deserves understanding.
Which Lenders Offer Loans Against Agricultural Land
Agricultural land is accepted as collateral by several categories of lenders in India. Scheduled commercial banks — including nationalised banks like State Bank of India, Canara Bank, and Union Bank — offer agricultural land loans primarily to farmers for crop-related purposes, but also to non-farmer landowners under specific schemes. Regional rural banks and cooperative banks in Karnataka have agricultural lending programs that may accept Coorg farmland as security. Some NBFCs and HFCs (housing finance companies) that have expanded into rural and semi-urban lending accept agricultural land as collateral for personal or business loans. Microfinance-adjacent NBFC-MFIs that work with agricultural communities in Karnataka sometimes offer loans against agricultural land security.
The availability and terms vary significantly by lender, your income profile, the location and value of the land, and whether you are seeking the loan for agricultural or non-agricultural purposes.
Typical Loan-to-Value Ratios
Lenders typically offer 50–70% of the assessed value of agricultural land as the loan amount — a lower LTV than urban property loans (which can go to 80–90%) because agricultural land is considered less liquid collateral. On a Coorg farmland plot assessed at ₹30 lakhs by a bank-appointed valuer, a loan of ₹15–21 lakhs may be available.
The assessed value used by the bank may differ from market value — banks typically use guideline value or a conservative independent valuation, which may be lower than what the land would actually transact at in the current market. Factor this into your liquidity planning.
Interest Rates and Tenure
Loans against agricultural land for declared agricultural purposes — crop cultivation, equipment, irrigation — qualify for priority sector lending rates at nationalised banks, which are typically lower than personal loan rates. For non-agricultural purposes using agricultural land as collateral, rates are closer to general secured loan rates — currently 10–14% per annum depending on the lender and borrower profile.
Loan tenures range from 3 to 15 years depending on the purpose and lender, with EMI or bullet repayment structures depending on the loan type.
What Documents Are Required
Lenders will typically require the original registered sale deed, current RTC showing your name, encumbrance certificate for the past 13 years confirming no prior mortgage or charge, property tax receipts if applicable, and a bank-appointed valuer’s assessment of the property. They will also register a mortgage deed (equitable or registered) against the property at the sub-registrar’s office, creating an entry in the EC — which is released once the loan is repaid.
The Strategic Use Case
The most compelling use of agricultural land as collateral is for business or investment opportunities that arise unexpectedly — a short-term business liquidity need, a co-investment opportunity, or a bridge to a larger asset purchase — where selling the farmland would be unnecessary and counterproductive. Borrowing 50% of the farmland’s value at 11–12% interest while the land itself continues appreciating at 12–15% per year means the appreciation covers or exceeds the interest cost, making the borrowing effectively neutral in capital terms while providing the needed liquidity.
This is not a strategy for routine use — borrowing against an appreciating asset should be done deliberately and with clear repayment plans. But knowing the option exists gives Coorg farmland investors a financial flexibility that holders of purely financial instruments also have (via pledging of mutual fund units) and that urban apartment owners understand well.
