Margin Protection Expands Across Southern Crops For 2026

Margin Protection and the new MCO add county-level margin tools — with earlier price discovery, input cost triggers, and high subsidy rates — to complement on-farm risk plans for 2026.

crop insurance priorities 1280.jpg

LUBBOCK, Texas (RFD-TV) — Margin Protection (MP) is a county-level crop insurance option that protects expected operating margin using county yields, futures prices, and region-specific input costs. Coverage ranges from 70 percent to 95 percent, and MP can be paired with individual policies such as Yield Protection or Revenue Protection — but not with the Supplemental Coverage Option or Enhanced Coverage Option.

A Protection Factor from 80 percent to 120 percent lets producers scale coverage — higher than 100% for farms that typically beat county yields, or lower if they tend to trail.

For some southern crops, MP uses an earlier sales-closing and price-discovery window — August 15 to September 14, 2025 — offering the chance to lock in values ahead of the normal spring window (January 15 to February 14, 2026). For corn, USDA’s Risk Management Agency lists a projected MP price of $4.55/bu, implying about $4.32/bu of price protection if county yields and costs hold. MP also tracks input futures — Urea, DAP, diesel, and interest rates — with their own projected and harvest discovery periods.

Hunter Biram, Assistant Professor and Associate Director at the Southern Risk Management Center, says decision support is available through the University of Arkansas’s web-based MP tool, including breakeven estimates.

One example shows a $4.13/bu breakeven at 95% coverage if the 30-day average of December 2026 corn futures during harvest (August 15 to September 14, 2026) falls below that mark. A new option, the Margin Coverage Option (MCO), provides area-based margin coverage over an 86% to 90% or 95% band, uses the same county yields as SCO/ECO, and carries an 80% premium subsidy. 2026 SCDs include September 30, 2025, for cotton and sorghum, and February 28, 2026, for Arkansas rice.

Farm-Level Takeaway: MP and the new MCO add county-level margin tools — with earlier price discovery, input cost triggers, and high subsidy rates — to complement on-farm risk plans for 2026.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Markets Expert
Related Stories
Success requires more than talent — on this week’s FFA Today, agriculture students show us the hard work, dedication, and teamwork required to gain important skills outside of the classroom through the National FFA Organization.
Federal assistance has helped, but the most recent row-crop losses remain on producers’ balance sheets.
RFD NEWS correspondent Frank McCaffrey spoke with U.S. Congressmen Henry Cuellar (D-TX) and John Rose (R-TN), who say bipartisan cooperation will be key to getting the Farm Bill to the president’s desk.
The EPA has approved over-the-top dicamba applications for the 2026 and 2027 growing seasons, outlining new rules that impact herbicide use for U.S. crop producers.
Seasonal price patterns can inform soybean marketing timing, particularly when harvest prices appear unusually strong or weak.
Texas cowboy chef and host of RFD Network’s Twisted Skillet, Sean Koehler, shares an elote-style street corn dip just in time for Super Bowl Sunday. This skillet-cooked corn dish combines open-fire cooking and bold regional flavors for a delicious twist on Mexican Street Corn.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Corn and soybean exports continue to anchor weekly inspection totals, with China maintaining a visible role, while wheat and sorghum remain more dependent on regional and seasonal demand shifts.
Rail continues to carry a larger share of the grain load, increasing sensitivity to rail capacity, labor, and pricing conditions.
Meat stocks rose seasonally but remain below last year overall, while tighter butter inventories could support dairy prices, and belly stocks warrant close watch for pork markets.
Payment totals alone do not show financial stress — production costs and net losses complete the picture.
Year-round E15 remains on the table, but procedural caution and competing regional interests pushed action into a slower, negotiated path.
A mid-January winter storm delivered snow, ice, and extreme cold to a broad swath of the U.S., disrupting transportation, stressing livestock systems, and adding cost and complexity to winter farm operations as producers look toward spring.
Agriculture Shows
Special 3-part series tells the story of the Claas family’s legacy, which changed agriculture forever.
From soil to harvest. Top Crop is an all-new series about four of the best farmers in the world—Dan Luepkes, of Oregan, Illinois; Cory Atley, of Cedarville, Ohio; Shelby Fite, of Jackson Center, Ohio; Russell Hedrick, of Hickory, North Carolina—reveals what it takes for them to make a profitable crop. It all starts with good soil, patience, and a strong planter setup.
Champions of Rural America is a half-hour dive into the legislative priorities for Rural America. Join us as we interview members of the Congressional Western Caucus to learn about efforts in Washington to preserve agriculture and tackles the most important topics in the ag industry on Champions of Rural America!
Featuring members of Congress, federal and state officials, ag and food leaders, farmers, and roundtable panelists for debates and discussions.