USDA crop insurance guarantees keeping pace with increasing input costs

WASHINGTON, DC – This year’s spring crop insurance guarantees are some of the highest on record, keeping pace with soaring input costs to provide a solid financial backstop in a growing season shrouded in volatility and uncertainty.

The spring crop insurance guarantee for corn is $5.90 per bushel, $1.05 higher than last year and the highest since 2011. For soybeans, the guarantee set a record at $14.33, up $2.46 from last year. Spring wheat also established a record at $9.19 per bushel, increasing 41% from last year’s guarantee.

The guarantees are an essential component of revenue protection crop insurance policies, the most popular subsidized insurance option among U.S. farmers. The spring guaranteed prices are computed by averaging the daily closing price of the December corn, November soybean and September spring wheat contracts throughout February. Those numbers are combined with the farm’s actual production history (APH) to determine a level of revenue. Farmers can elect to insure up to 85% of that revenue, with most choosing to purchase 75%, 80% or 85% depending on what the premiums are in their area.

Farmers should also expect premiums to increase along with the higher coverage levels.

“This crop insurance guarantee, I think, has given farmers a lot more peace of mind and confidence to get out there and plant no matter what the uncertainty on the table,” DTN Lead Analyst Todd Hultman said. “And I think that gives the market, in general, a lot of comfort knowing that farmers are going to do their best at production this year.”

Hultman said dry weather is limiting production prospects in South America, while the war between Russia and Ukraine helped drive up crop prices during February.

“Even though grain prices are high, we also have high input costs and a lot of volatility and uncertainty,” he said.

Hultman said fertilizer, chemical and fuel costs will be considerably higher this year, although each farm’s individual cost structure will vary based on the timing of their purchases and other factors. On average, he estimates it will cost about $900 to grow an acre of corn and $600 per acre of soybeans. Hultman started with USDA’s average crop production cost forecasts, but since the agency didn’t adjust for surging input prices, he doubled the costs for fertilizer and chemicals and increased fuel expenses by 50% to arrive at his cost estimates. The estimates do include land costs, although those are also highly variable. (You can find a spreadsheet of USDA’s estimates here: https://www.ers.usda.gov/

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