NASHVILLE, Tenn. (RFD NEWS) — As the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farmer Bridge Assistance program rolls out, the interplay between per-acre payment rates and federal payment limits is highlighting stark differences in how quickly producers of different crops can reach the cap. With the national average farm size around 466 acres, many operations growing lower-rate crops are unlikely to approach the $155,000 per-producer limit, while others can reach it with far fewer acres.
USDA set specific per-acre payment rates for 2025 planted acres under the Farmer Bridge Assistance program. Rice leads at $132.89 per acre, followed by cotton at $117.35 and oats at $81.75, while soybeans are set at $30.88 per acre and barley at $20.51. Based on those rates, rice producers would need roughly 1,167 acres to reach the payment cap, and cotton producers about 1,321 acres. By comparison, soybean growers would need more than 5,000 acres, while barley producers would need well over 7,500 acres to reach the same limit.
Payment limits are intended to spread assistance across producers and prevent outsized allocations to a small number of operations. However, the current structure means crops with higher per-acre rates reach the cap more quickly, while producers growing lower-rate commodities may receive only a fraction of the maximum payment even on operations well above the national average size.
As policymakers evaluate near-term assistance and longer-term safety-net changes, the math behind bridge payments is drawing renewed attention. The structure raises questions about whether per-acre payment rates and uniform payment caps effectively align federal support with the scale of losses producers face across different crops.
Confusion and Questions Surround Various Farm Aid Programs
A number of farm programs are paying out to producers this year, but with multiple programs and detailed rules, confusion is growing around payment limits and eligibility.
Farm CPA Paul Neiffer joined us on Thursday’s Market Day Report to address the questions he is hearing most from farmers as they navigate current assistance programs.
In his interview with RFD NEWS, Neiffer outlined the different programs involved and explained where uncertainty around payment limits is arising. He also addressed the USDA’s Farmer Bridge Assistance Program, including whether Congress could increase funding and what the potential timeline for payments would be if changes are made.