Rising costs and falling crop prices push farmers toward deeper financial stress
Farmers across the United States are experiencing one of the toughest financial periods in recent years. Many producers are operating below breakeven as crop prices fall and input costs rise. Working capital has declined, Chapter 12 farm bankruptcies have increased, and lenders expect profits to remain weak going into 2026. This situation puts the long-term stability of the farm economy at risk.
Trade losses have added pressure to an already difficult period. Farmers have seen billions of dollars in export declines, especially in major markets like China. While several trade frameworks have been announced, they have not yet resulted in stronger export volumes. Cash prices for crops such as corn, soybeans, wheat, and cotton remain below early-2025 levels, limiting farm revenue. For producers who lacked storage and had to sell at harvest lows, improved market access will arrive too late.
Corn farmers alone planted nearly 100 million acres in 2025 due to shifting market signals. With total production costs around $900 per acre, growers invested about $90 billion in the crop. Even with a record expected yield of 186 bushels per acre and a $4 national average price, farmers face losses of more than $150 per acre, adding up to more than $15 billion nationwide. Similar patterns exist across other major and specialty crops.
USDA reports confirm multiple years of negative returns, with combined losses across nine principal crops reaching $20.2 billion in 2023/24, $34.8 billion in 2024/25, and $34.6 billion in 2025/26 before insurance and other support. Specialty crop growers face even higher costs due to labor demands and regulatory requirements.