USDA Survey Shows Potato Chemical Use Across States

Potato growers now have a fresh benchmark for comparing fertilizer, pesticide, and pest-management practices across major production states.

Carol_Ann_Sayle_05_27_16_USA_TX_Boggy_Creek_Farm_001.jpg red potatoes in a basket

FarmHER, Inc.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (RFD NEWS) — Potato growers now have a fresh benchmark for comparing fertilizer, pesticide, and pest-management practices across major production states. USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service says nine surveyed states accounted for 91.9 percent of the 902,000 U.S. acres planted to potatoes in 2025.

The survey included Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin. Idaho led the surveyed states with 315,000 planted acres, followed by Washington at 140,000 acres.

Fertilizer use was widespread. USDA says nitrogen was applied to 99 percent of potato acres at an average rate of 176 pounds per acre. Phosphate was applied to 88 percent, potash to 83 percent, and sulfur to 78 percent.

Fungicides were the most common pesticide category, applied to 96 percent of planted acres. Insecticides were used on 92 percent of the area, while herbicides covered 90 percent.

USDA reports that scouting for diseases, insects, and weeds was conducted on 99 percent of planted acres, underscoring how closely potato production depends on monitoring and prevention.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Potato growers can use the survey to compare nutrient, pesticide, and scouting practices against national production benchmarks.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
Related Stories
Ethanol plants kept production steady, but softer gasoline demand and lower exports may limit near-term momentum.
The uncommon delivery has kept one farmer busy caring for four newborn kids at once.
Aimee Bissell discusses Iowa planting progress, weather conditions, fertilizer costs, and concerns over early crop development.
Farm CPA Paul Neiffer discusses SDRP payment limits and offers advice for those seeking higher limits.
Farmers are closely watching upcoming U.S.-China trade talks as rising fertilizer and diesel costs continue to pressure exports, margins, and rural economies.
Lawmakers advance FY27 agriculture funding bill, highlighting support for rural development, school lunches, disease response, and water issues.

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:

National Pork Producers Council President Rob Brenneman joins us to discuss Prop 12 provisions in the House’s Farm Bill as it heads to the Senate for debate.
This case could influence how much leverage grain shippers have when a preferred rail outlet is blocked or priced too high.
U.S. Cattlemen’s Association President Justin Tupper joins us to discuss the DOJ packer investigation, industry competition, and the outlook for cattle producers.
Farm Bureau economist Dr. Faith Parum says EPA’s final biofuel volumes keep corn demand steady and strengthen the outlook for soybean-based diesel feedstocks.
Global soybean competition is moving deeper into crush capacity, logistics, and value-added product control.
CME Group’s Fred Seamon joins us to break down the drop in farmer sentiment, discuss the role of input costs and global factors, and share his outlook for the ag economy ahead.
Agriculture Shows
Created by former Louisiana Farm Bureau PR Director and former host Regnal Wallace, “This Week in Louisiana Agriculture,” is one of the state’s longest-running TV programs.
From the rapid technological advances in the business of farming to the policy that helps shape the industry, growers get unparalleled perspective from these guys. Max Armstrong, Mike Pearson and Greg Soulje: the names producers have long known and trusted for agriculture news, weather, and commentary.
Watch Rural Evening News on RFD Network to catch up on that day’s news surrounding agriculture and markets from across the world.
Every day on RFD Network, “Market Day Report” delivers LIVE coverage of agribusiness news, weather, and commodity market information from across the world. Our commodity markets coverage is updated every half hour to bringyou the latest agriculture news.