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Texas Farm Subsidy Data

USDA ERS Farm Income & Wealth Statistics · TX · South · Data year: 2023

Total Payments
$1.2B
Cumulative 1995–2024
Conservation
$186M
CRP, EQIP, CSP
Disaster Aid
$887M
CFAP, MFP, LFP, ERP
Net Farm Income
$15.4B
2023

What the Texas Farm Data Shows

Texas has received $1.2B in cumulative USDA farm program payments between 1995 and 2024, including $186M in conservation payments (CRP, EQIP, CSP) and $887M in disaster assistance (CFAP, MFP, LFP, ERP). Net farm income for 2023 came in at $15.4B, sitting on top of $38.8B in gross cash income and $29.9B in total cash receipts from all commodities. The leading program category for Texas is Disaster Assistance. These figures come straight from the USDA Economic Research Service Farm Income and Wealth Statistics release — the same source file that Congress, the Congressional Budget Office, and the Farm Service Agency use when they score Farm Bill proposals.

Texas's agriculture is anchored by Cattle ($13.4B in cash receipts), Poultry ($3.4B in cash receipts), Cotton ($1.6B in cash receipts), with the top three commodities accounting for a significant share of the state's $29.9B in total cash receipts. The crop-insurance loss ratio — indemnities paid out divided by premiums collected — stands at 421%, with $$788M in premiums and $$3.3B in indemnity payments. A loss ratio above 100% means insurers paid out more in claims than they collected in premiums, a signal of significant yield or revenue shortfalls in recent years.

Reading Texas's farm data correctly means holding three lenses at once: commodity cash receipts (which track market activity), government payments (which track federal policy), and net farm income (which tracks actual economic outcomes). These three numbers move independently — a bumper crop year can drive up receipts while depressing prices and triggering government payments; a disaster year can crush receipts while unlocking indemnities and disaster aid. Use the payment history, county table, and nearby-state comparison below to benchmark Texas against its region before drawing conclusions about the health, resilience, or federal dependence of the state's agricultural economy.

Payment History (Recent Years)

Year Total
2024 $985M
2023 $1.2B
2022 $1.6B
2021 $1.8B
2020 $3.1B
2019 $1.8B
2018 $850M
2017 $937M
2016 $979M
2015 $945M

Cash Receipts by Commodity

Cattle $13.4B (44.7%)
Poultry $3.4B (11.5%)
Cotton $1.6B (5.2%)
Corn $1.3B (4.5%)
Wheat $565M (1.9%)
Soybeans $24M (0.1%)
Total cash receipts: $29.9B

Crop Insurance

Premiums Paid
$788M
Indemnities
$3.3B
Loss Ratio
421%

Loss ratio = indemnities ÷ premiums. Above 100% means claims exceeded premiums.

Top counties in Texas by commodity sales

Top 5 Texas counties — commodity sales

Top 5 Texas counties — commodity sales Horizontal bar chart of the top 5 items by value (USD). Top 5 Texas counties — commodity sales Top 5 1. Deaf Smith $1.9B 2. Castro $1.8B 3. Hartley $1.7B 4. Parmer $1.4B 5. Dallam $1.1B Top 5 counties in Texas ranked by total commodity sales (USDA NASS Census of Agriculture). Source: USDA NASS Census of Agriculture + USDA ERS Farm Income.

Counties in Texas (254)

County Farms
Deaf Smith 663
Castro 415
Hartley 224
Parmer 477
Dallam 323
Gonzales 1,870
Sherman 282
Hansford 137
Swisher 441
Randall 843
Moore 218
Shelby 799
Nacogdoches 1,014
Lamb 879
Erath 2,400
Hale 779
Wharton 1,472
Hidalgo 2,045
Bailey 389
Ochiltree 285

Showing top 20 of 254 counties by commodity sales. View all counties →

Source: USDA Economic Research Service, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics (1995-2024) USDA Economic Research Service, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics (1995-2024) County data: USDA NASS 2022 Census of Agriculture

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Texas receive in farm subsidies?

Texas has received $1.2B in total USDA government farm payments (cumulative, 1995–2024), including $186M in conservation payments and $887M in disaster assistance.

What programs does Texas use most?

Texas's leading program category is Disaster Assistance. Key programs include the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC), Price Loss Coverage (PLC), and disaster assistance programs like CFAP and ERP.

What is Texas's crop insurance loss ratio?

Texas's crop insurance loss ratio is 421%, meaning insurers paid out 421% of every dollar collected in premiums. A ratio above 100% indicates significant crop losses relative to premiums.

What is Texas's net farm income?

Texas's net farm income is $15.4B (2023), with gross cash income of $38.8B and total cash receipts of $29.9B. Net farm income measures total agricultural output minus production expenses.

How much conservation funding does Texas receive?

Texas has received $186M in conservation program payments (cumulative, 1995–2024). These include programs like the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), and Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP), which support soil health, water quality, and habitat preservation.

What crops are most important to Texas's agriculture?

Texas's top agricultural commodities by cash receipts include Cattle ($13.4B), Poultry ($3.4B), Cotton ($1.6B). Total cash receipts across all commodities are $29.9B.

Learn More

Agricultural Income

Gross Cash Income $38.8B
Net Cash Income $16.4B
Net Farm Income $15.4B
ARC Payments $72M
PLC Payments $2M
Data Source
USDA Economic Research Service
Farm Income and Wealth Statistics
Released: February 5, 2026
Coverage: 1995–2024

Related

Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainFarmData Editorial

Verify with U.S. Census Bureau →