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Nordberg Family Transfer Exemption (Bonner)

Project Description:

Jason Nordberg is requesting to use the family transfer exemption from subdivision review to divide his current 20-acre property in Bonner into two 10-acre tracts. The property does not have an address but is located between Red Tail Road and Mystic Moon road.

Jason plans to gift both lots to his wife, Jennifer Nordberg. Jennifer plans to transfer both lots to their two children when they turn 18. Jason and Jennifer will continue to live at 650 Mystic Moon Road, which is one lot over from the family transfer parcel.


Subdivision Regulations and Exemptions

Missoula County’s subdivision regulationspromote public health, safety and general welfareby ensuring any subdivision of land in the County’s jurisdiction provides foradequate light, air, water supply, sewage disposal, parks and recreation areas, ingress and egress and other public requirements.Many requests to divide land must go through thesubdivision processto ensure these requirements are met, butcertain types of land divisionare exempt from subdivision review. Landowners can apply forone or multiple subdivision exemptionswhen their development plans meet the state and local requirements for the applicable exemptions.

Being granted these exemptions means the property ownerdoes not need to go through the standard subdivision review processto divide their property. These requests require administrative review by planning staff and, in some cases, may requireapproval by the county commissionersto ensure the applicant is not evading these regulations.

  • Family Transfer Exemption
    Landowners can request afamily transfer exemptionwhen they intend to divide their property togift or sell the newly created parcel(s) to an immediate family member.

What is a family transfer?

Montana law specifically allows landowners to divide land and gift or sell one parcel per immediate family member (like a child, parent or spouse), without full subdivision review.

Requests for family transfers must always come before the commissioners. Missoula County considers dozens of family land transfers every year. It’s not rare — other counties across Montana regularly process these applications too. It’s not a loophole — it’s in the law for a reason: to help families live near each other or pass down land. It’s does not skirt regulations — the process requires surveys, documentation, fees and approval by county commissioners.

The landowner and recipient must be real people, not LLCs or corporations. It can only be used once per family member per county.


Project Timeline:

County commissioners hearing: Thursday, Jan. 29, 2 p.m.

  • In-person location:Sophie Moiese Room, Missoula County Courthouse Annex, 200 West Broadway, Missoula

  • Virtual option: Residents can attend the meeting via Microsoft Teams. To join the call on your phone, call 406-272-4824, Conference ID 467 457 758#. To join the meeting on your device, follow the links on the agenda that will be published athttp://missoula.co/bccmeetings


Public Comment:

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Project Lead:


Important Links and Documents:

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