Generational Renewal Strategies across the EU

Oct 29, 2025 | Farm Viability

The EU CAP Networks latest report on their assessment of generational renewal strategies across EU Member States explores recent trends in generational renewal across EU agriculture with particular attention to socioeconomic and structural barriers to generational renewal, including those that deepen the gender divide. The report has compiled and classified policy instruments, highlighting successful strategies and good practices that could be replicated across Member States, including those supporting female farm succession.

Covering all 27 Member States, the study focuses on the 2023-2027 CAP programming period, but also draws on earlier CAP periods to provide historical policy context. Their mixed-methods approach combined interviews, case studies, a survey of young farmers and aspiring new farmers, and documentary analysis to assess how generational renewal is being addressed across the EU.

The study confirms that generational renewal continues to pose a major challenge for EU agriculture, as evidenced by the scientific literature and official statistics. Most Member States continue to face an ageing farming population, low entry rates of young farmers and enduring gender disparities, particularly in economically disadvantaged areas, labour-intensive sectors and small-sized farms.

While some countries have been successful in attracting younger generations into farming, structural barriers such as limited access to land and finance, economic insecurity, rural areas’ poor infrastructure and regulatory complexity continue to discourage both young and female successors.

Other countries have introduced innovative fiscal and regulatory solutions, support for quality of life, female successors and the psycho-social aspects of farm succession remains limited, despite their recognised impact on succession decisions. Current strategies fall short of systematically addressing the gender gap; therefore, more targeted support integrated into the design of interventions is needed to ensure equal access.

Several promising practices have emerged from the study. These include combining different types of support to create more flexible aid systems, providing targeted training and advisory services, facilitating non-family succession and promoting cooperative models for land access and management.

The full report can be read here.

To learn more about the CAP Strategic Plan 2023-2027, click here.

Related Articles

CAP Network Ireland
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.