NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — Rising equipment costs are adding pressure to farm budgets, increasing per-acre expenses and raising the financial bar for staying competitive.
Analysis from Mississippi State University’s Brian Mills shows major machinery prices have climbed well above inflation since 2019. A 200–249 horsepower tractor has increased from about $191,000 to $327,000, a 71 percent jump, while per-acre costs rose from $27.24 to $41.11, assuming 2,000 acres of use.
The same pattern is showing up across key equipment categories. Cotton picker prices climbed from $777,000 to $1.1 million, pushing costs from $126.35 to $189.34 per acre. A 12-row planter rose from $76,800 to $123,600, increasing per-acre costs from $12.26 to $19.76.
Higher purchase prices are translating into greater financing needs and debt exposure, especially in a higher-interest-rate environment. Without adding acres, producers are facing significantly higher cost structures tied directly to machinery.
The trend favors larger operations that can spread equipment costs across more acres, while smaller farms may rely more on used equipment, leasing, or custom work to manage expenses.
Farm-Level Takeaway: Higher machinery costs are raising per-acre production expenses.
Tony St. James, RFD NEWS Markets Specialist
U.S. producers are holding off on equipment investments amid financial pressure, market uncertainty, a rising demand for diesel, and growing desperation for trade wins.
September 12, 2025 11:18 AM
·
Farm CPA Paul Neiffer joined us on Thursday’s Market Day Report for a closer look at how Trump’s Big, Beautiful Bill changes to base acres and potential impacts on future ARC and PLC payments.
September 11, 2025 01:36 PM
·
September 08, 2025 11:44 AM
·
Co-Bank Lead Dairy Economist, Corey Geiger, joined us on Friday’s
Market Day Report for a further look at the drop in replacement heifers and the trend’s longterm impact on dairy producers and cattle prices.
September 05, 2025 12:40 PM
·
The agriculture workforce’s struggles with labor issues in recent years have opened the door to more automation and integration of artificial intelligence (AI).
September 05, 2025 11:58 AM
·
Farmers are struggling with low commodity prices and skyrocketing input costs, resulting in debt that is outpacing income across the sector, according to the USDA’s new farm income forecast.
September 04, 2025 01:05 PM
·