NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — The structure of American agriculture continues to shift toward fewer but larger operations as consolidation continues across the countryside.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farms and Land in Farms 2025 Summary (PDF Version) shows the United States had 1.865 million farms in 2025, down from just over 2.02 million in 2018. Meanwhile, land in farms slipped only modestly to 873.9 million acres. Because farmland changed little while farm numbers fell, average farm size climbed to a record 469 acres.
The trend reflects long-running economic pressure. Higher equipment costs, labor shortages, and thinner margins make it harder for smaller operations to remain viable without expansion. Many retiring operators are not replaced by new entrants, allowing neighboring farms to absorb acres.
The shift changes how production decisions ripple through rural communities — fewer operators now manage a larger share of output, concentrating risk and marketing power into fewer hands. The pattern suggests structural change rather than a temporary cycle, reinforcing expectations that farm consolidation will continue shaping rural economies and land markets in the years ahead.
Mid-Size Farms Continue Disappearing From U.S. Agriculture
The biggest loss in American agriculture is occurring in the middle as commercial family farms steadily disappear.
USDA data show nearly 79 percent of farms generate under $100,000 in annual sales yet control only about one-quarter of farmland. At the same time, farms selling more than $1 million of products represent just over 6 percent of operations but manage about 36 percent of all agricultural land.
That leaves mid-size farms — historically the backbone of rural communities — squeezed between scale efficiency and limited capital access. These operations are often too large to rely on off-farm income but too small to capture the purchasing and marketing advantages of larger competitors.
As a result, many mid-tier producers either expand significantly or exit entirely. The shift affects local equipment dealers, lenders, and service providers that traditionally depended on a wide base of independent commercial farms.
The data reinforce economists’ concerns that the rural economy is losing its broad commercial producer base rather than that agriculture itself is shrinking.
Large Farms Control Growing Share Of U.S. Farmland
A small share of farms now controls an outsized portion of American agricultural land.
According to USDA farm structure data, operations with more than $1 million in annual sales account for about 6 percent of farms but cover roughly 36 percent of all farmland. By comparison, smaller operations dominate farm counts but manage far fewer acres.
Economies of scale drive much of the shift. Larger farms can spread equipment, technology, and input costs across more acres while maintaining tighter margins. That advantage allows expansion during downturns when smaller competitors struggle financially.
Greater concentration also affects marketing patterns. Grain merchandising, input purchasing, and contract negotiations increasingly involve fewer but larger producers, changing how agribusiness firms structure their services and risk-management offerings.
While productivity gains often follow scale, the concentration raises ongoing debate about market access and competition across rural regions.
Small Farms Persist But Operate Limited Agricultural Land
America still has many small farms, but they cover only a small share of farmland.
Nearly half of U.S. farms report less than $10,000 in annual sales, according to USDA data. Yet those operations account for only about 8 percent of farmland nationwide, highlighting a widening divide between farm counts and production control.
Many of these operations rely on off-farm income, retirement holdings, or part-time management rather than full commercial production. Their presence keeps farm numbers high even as working production concentrates into fewer hands.
The split creates two different agricultural economies — one driven by lifestyle and land ownership, and another by commercial scale production. This distinction helps explain why national farm counts can remain relatively stable while rural production capacity continues to consolidate.
Economists say the trend complicates policy debates because farm programs affect very different types of operations in very different ways.