Good day. It’s sort of hard for me to imagine / suggest not having seen your new place or the likely uses you might have into the future…so it’s hard for me to suggest much…(any plans for livestock or gardening, hauling/cutting wood or more property in a few years or something tied to a hobby?
I think when it comes to front loader think about how much weight you might want to be able to lift someday and then also how high…actual safe lift capacity drops significantly when the ground is not flat and the higher you are lifting…so if you ever plan to want to save you back and put stuff on a pallet to shuttle around or maybe receive feed for animals, move totes of water, or maybe pick up pallets of brick or quick Crete or pavers whatever, think about how much that might weigh and how much lift capability you might like to have. That’s one thought. Another thought is how high do you want to lift stuff? I understood you have a forecast on a outbuilding…so you have plans for any type of industrial shelving that would hold a pallet? How high do you want to lift the stuff you might store?
From a PTO / usual power standpoint implements are normally sized to the tractor…so unless you have a need for something on the PTO, maybe not so much an issue.
In general I think maybe coming to terms with the stance and weight of the machine (stability and traction) and consider that with front loader use, that may help determine size. If money is the cap, personally I’d try to find same size or bigger machine than I need that is used vs buying smaller and new. if you need the size and weight for what you want to do safely then that is very very different from wanting a new tractor. IMO. Do you plan to cut wood? How large of trees and logs you might deal with? I’d rather have used and larger for heavy lifting than new and small
If you plan to used the machine in a confined space, that might nudge you one way or another as well. Confined space is better to suggest a smaller size than acreage…there are so many uses for a tractor that are not acreage dependant to only use that for sizing…if you have five acres and some hobby livestock and receive pallets of feed, a BX or B might be perfect for mowing the five acres but it might not hand the materials ver well (I did not understand you were worried about a MMM so why I would think be cautious to consider small tractor to 5 acres…I think there is much more work that could be done depending on your intentions…be cautious to undersize yourself, that’s all (I had a BX, before my current B, and my current MX
)
Finally I think spend some time thinking about future uses, it’s honestly hard to imagine but I suspect most on here have found creative ways to do things to save their backs…there was a thread not long ago about ‘how many implements’ or something to that effect…maybe take a look and see what all the different implements are and maybe that will also suggest how you may realize you could use the machine after you have it.
I am not sure this helps or not.