Stable Debt Ratios Mask Rising Interest-Rate Pressure for Illinois Farmers

New data from the Illinois Farm Bureau show that farm financial conditions are stabilizing, even as debt per acre and borrowing costs continue to climb.

FISHER, Ill. (RFD News) — With planting season in full swing, many farmers are taking a closer look at their finances, and new data from the Illinois Farm Bureau suggests conditions may not be as difficult as they first appear.

The bureau’s record-keeping service reports the average farm debt-to-asset ratio in Illinois held steady in 2025 at a historically low 18 percent.

Still, there are some growing concerns.

Debt per acre has risen to nearly $900, driven largely by equipment purchases and land acquisitions.

Vice President of Data Analysis Bradley Zwilling says higher debt loads, combined with rising interest rates and increased reliance on operating loans, have significantly increased interest expenses in recent years.

“Our interest expense is growing over the last couple of years because we know that the interest rates, we were in such a low-interest rate environment. Now that those rates are back up, I don’t want to say to normal, but a little bit higher range than we’re used to, and so that debt per acre, because of the debt, the amount of debt we’ve got, and a little bit higher interest rates, has caused that debt per acre to go from about $30 an acre to now $50 an acre in 2025.”

More than half of the average farm’s net worth is tied up in long-term assets like farmland, which Zwilling says makes succession planning an increasingly important part of long-term financial stability.

While operating income margins remain below ideal targets, overall liquidity stabilized last year.

Related Stories
Austin Rice with Specialty Risk Insurance shares guidance on handling storm damage, navigating the insurance claims process, and managing risk during a volatile planting season.
High input costs and persistant drought is pushing Midwest growers to rethink planting decisions.
RFD News correspondent Frank McCaffrey spoke with the Texas Shrimp Association at the Port of Brownsville about the future of the USDA’s new Office of Seafood.
Food inflation is still building in 2026, with beef leading pressure while eggs and dairy offer some relief.
Diesel has eased for now, but the larger 2026 energy outlook still points to elevated fuel costs.
Discussions focused on rising costs and the future of farm policy.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Vermicompost business helps boost soil health from the ground up.
California almond acreage tightens while pistachios shift into an off-year, shaping a mixed outlook for prices and supply in the tree nut market.
New treatments offer hope, but challenges remain for beekeepers.
Growers are making progress with planting despite dry conditions.
Dry conditions are already showing up in pastures across the region this April.
Georgia Grown Marketing Coordinator Happy Wyatt has spent the past 20 years teaching young students about agriculture and its connection to their everyday lives.