There's a problem on mainland that's quietly eating into land availability and into Linden Lab's own revenue and almost no one is talking about it.
I keep running into parcels that were requested from Linden Lab, reserved under someone's name and then never actually bought. They don't sit for a day or two. They sit for months. Sometimes years.
Every one of those parcels is dead land. No one else can request it, no one can buy it, no one can build on it even when the original requester has clearly walked away and has zero intention of completing the purchase. The land just rots under a name. And this isn't a rare edge case; once you start looking, it's everywhere. Multiply it across the grid and you're looking at a real chunk of mainland that's been pulled out of circulation for no reason other than a abandoned land reservation that never expires.
Here's the part Linden Lab should care about most: while that parcel sits reserved but unpurchased,
it generates no tier.
It stays in limbo under LL, nobody owns it, and nobody is paying monthly land fees on it. The moment a real buyer takes it, that's recurring tier revenue flowing to Linden Lab every month, ongoing. So every parcel locked behind a dead reservation isn't just frustrating for residents; it's money LL is leaving on the table, month after month, for land that someone else would happily pay tier on right now.
Mainland already has enough working against it. Locking up land indefinitely behind dead reservations makes it actively worse it shrinks supply, kills circulation, blocks active residents who actually want to expand and invest, and quietly costs Linden Lab tier income it should be collecting.
Here's the part that makes it more frustrating: from what I've seen, there's a 48-hour window in play if the requester doesn't buy the parcel within 48 hours, the parcel can be requested by someone else. I say "from what I've seen" because it's inconsistent: sometimes the 48-hour policy is mentioned in the support ticket response, and sometimes it isn't mentioned at all. Either way, claiming it still means filing a ticket and waiting a couple of days for a Land Linden to respond. So the fix already exists in spirit; it's just buried behind a manual, multi-day process almost no one will bother with. Why make everyone burn time, energy, and resources on a ticket and a wait? Automate it.
And honestly, most people don't even know the 48-hour rule exists. Most won't check the claimed date or the date in the title. Some Lindens use the title date to show when a parcel was allocated, but the average person just glances at it, sees it's already allocated to someone, and moves on. So the one safeguard that does exist is invisible to the people it's supposed to help.
Proposed change:
make the expiration automatic. If a resident requests a parcel but doesn't complete the purchase within a set window (7 days would be more than fair), the reservation expires on its own and abandoned parcels return to the abandoned land pool.
This is a small policy change with a real, grid-wide payoff. It costs Linden Lab almost nothing, requires no new system anyone has to learn, immediately frees up land that's currently doing nothing for no one, and starts converting dead reservations into actual tier-paying owners. For something that directly affects both usable mainland availability and LL's own land revenue
And if I've misunderstood any part of how this currently works, or gotten a detail wrong, please correct me.