Wheat Freight Costs Rise as Plains Crop Shrinks

Southern Plains wheat shippers face higher rail fuel surcharges as hard red winter wheat production falls toward a nearly 70-year low.

NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — Southern Plains wheat shippers face higher rail fuel surcharges as hard red winter wheat production falls toward a nearly 70-year low. USDA’s Grain Transportation Report says BNSF and Union Pacific made only modest tariff changes for the 2026/27 marketing year, but fuel costs are rising sharply.

The biggest change is the fuel surcharge. USDA says BNSF’s June surcharge will rise to 46 cents per mile, up from 8 cents last June. Union Pacific’s surcharge will rise to 69 cents per mile, up from 30 cents.

That increase can add real cost to wheat movement. For Wichita-to-Houston shipments, USDA says higher fuel surcharges mean a $251-per-car increase for Union Pacific and a $387-per-car increase for BNSF.

The higher freight cost comes as USDA forecasts hard red winter wheat production at 515 million bushels, down 36 percent from last year and the smallest crop since 1957/58. Drought and a late-season freeze drove the decline.

Large old-crop ending stocks may still support transportation demand, but lower production and higher freight costs will shape movement.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Wheat shippers may face higher rail costs even as drought sharply reduces Southern Plains production.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
Related Stories
A new maritime biofuels coalition aims to position ocean shipping as a significant growth market for U.S. crops and waste-derived fuels.
Larger operations maintain cost advantages, while softer equipment sales suggest producers are pacing machinery upgrades amid tighter margins.
Transportation access, legal disputes, and fertilizer freight costs will directly influence input pricing and grain movement in 2026.
Despite China’s sharp drop in grain purchases this year, new USDA export data this week shows that even some buying activity from the trade giant still moves the markets.

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:

U.S. sugar producers and processors should brace for price pressure and challenging export logistics with global sugar supply ramping up — driven by Brazil, India, and Thailand — especially at the raw processing level.
The Farm Bureau urges trade enforcement, biofuel growth, fair input pricing, and pro-farmer policy reforms to restore long-term certainty.
The Sheinbaum–Rollins meeting signals progress, but the focus remains on fully containing screwworm before cross-border movement resumes.
Livestock profits are propping up overall sentiment, but crop producers remain cautious amid tight margins and uncertain policy signals.
RaboResearch says China’s pivot from mass production to innovation-driven growth could reshape global pesticide supply chains — and influence prices and product access for U.S. farmers in the coming years.
Expect modest relief on several produce lines, mixed protein trends into holiday buying, and softer veg-oil costs — a good week to sharpen forward buys selectively.