Six appointments have been made to the body, with ministers having advertised for people from a range of backgrounds who would “form the evidence base for any future land reform measures”.
However, shadow rural affairs secretary Peter Chapman pointed out none of £200-a-day posts were occupied by working farmers, who will be most impacted by any changes.
Instead the Scottish Government has appointed academics, chartered accountants and retired civil servants.
The Scottish Conservatives have already criticised the SNP’s land reform ambitions as being rooted in dogma, rather than what is right for Scotland’s rural communities.
Farmers are furious with the nationalists over the botched IT system for CAP payments, which starved areas of hundreds of millions of pounds this year.
Scottish Conservative shadow rural affairs secretary Peter Chapman said:
“We’ve seen the SNP treat farmers with sheer contempt over this past year.
“Perhaps that’s why the Scottish Government can’t find a single one to sit on its Land Commission.
“As ever with the nationalists the urban, central belt bias is stark.
“The fact of the matter is farmers have a lot of knowledge and expertise they could impart in this process.
“They’re the ones who know best, and who will be impacted the most by any changes ministers pursue.
“But looking at this list of appointments, there isn’t a single real farmer on here.
“You can’t call someone with two sheep and a back garden a farmer, and Scotland’s rural communities will see right through that.”