The American farmer is currently navigating one of the most complex financial environments in a decade. Our latest Ag Pulse research, gathered in Q4 of 2025 from over 650 commercial operations, shows crop farm profits remaining significantly lower than 2022 record levels with over 80% of crop farmers expecting profits to either stagnate or decline further this year. This fact highlights how the traditional "sales pitch" has lost its luster.
What has taken its place is a demand for empathy and partnership. Farmers are no longer just looking for a bag of seed or a jug of chemicals; they are looking for a roadmap to survival. This shift has placed the local retailer in a new, high-stakes role: the primary technical advisor.
Our research highlights a fundamental shift in how growers are protecting their bottom line:
The Repair-First Mindset: 77% of farmers are choosing to repair existing machinery rather than replace it, prioritizing maintenance over new capital expenditures.
The Efficiency Audit: Nearly half of crop farmers plan to reduce or delay fertilizer applications and reduce tillage to manage costs.
As farmers look for ways to trim expenses, they are turning to their retailers with difficult questions. They aren't asking for a brochure; they are asking for proof.
"Can I maintain my yield while reducing my application rates?"
"What is the measurable performance floor if I switch from a branded product to a generic?"
There is a significant opportunity for manufacturers to better equip their retail partners. Farmers want a "thought partner" who can talk them through seasonal operational challenges and provide transparent, net-pricing conversations. If a brand can’t help a retailer answer the "yield vs. cost" equation with data, the farmer will gravitate toward the lowest price point.
Financing is no longer just a back-office function; it has become a primary driver of brand loyalty.
Alternative Financing: 41% of farmers now rank flexible financing as the single most valuable support a supplier can provide.
While this research provides a clear snapshot of the current "squeeze," it also uncovers several critical questions that require deeper, custom exploration for any brand looking to maintain market share:
The Service Network: With the massive shift toward repairs over replacements, is your parts and service network positioned as a brand-building tool or a bottleneck?
Ag Access and Meridian Agribusiness Advisors conducted this study to move past the "what" and get to the "how." The landscape is changing, but for brands that can bridge the education and financing gap, the opportunity to build long-term trust has never been higher.
We’re ready to share the full dataset and help you translate these trends into a concrete plan. Let's review the findings together.
This post is a part of our Ag Pulse series. This series is a set of blogs posted about the insights from research conducted by Ag Access amongst our 400,000+ member community of agricultural professionals and hobbyists.