{"id":954,"date":"2026-05-22T07:43:38","date_gmt":"2026-05-22T07:43:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/foragebaler.com\/?p=954"},"modified":"2026-05-22T07:43:38","modified_gmt":"2026-05-22T07:43:38","slug":"hay-crop-insurance-options-forage-producers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/foragebaler.com\/ja\/hay-crop-insurance-options-forage-producers\/","title":{"rendered":"Hay Crop Insurance: WFRP, PRF, and Options for Forage Producers"},"content":{"rendered":"
Hay and forage crops have historically been among the most underinsured agricultural commodities in the U.S. \u2014 many producers plant, grow, and sell hay without any revenue protection against drought, flood, or market disruption. The USDA Risk Management Agency offers several programs specifically designed for forage producers, and understanding which program fits which operation type is the first step toward building a risk management program that protects the operation’s revenue in adverse years.<\/p>\n
Program Overview<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n USDA Risk Management Agency (RMA) offers forage-relevant insurance programs that differ fundamentally in what they insure \u2014 your actual production, your revenue, or a weather index \u2014 and in how losses are triggered and paid. Each program fits a different operation profile; using the wrong program for your situation produces either inadequate coverage or unnecessary premium cost.<\/p>\n PRF is the most widely used forage insurance program in the U.S. and is available in all 48 contiguous states. It insures against rainfall deficits \u2014 not actual yield loss. When rainfall at the NOAA Climate Grid point covering your operation falls below the insured percentage of the historical average during your selected two-month intervals, you receive an indemnity payment. The key advantage of PRF is simplicity: no production records are required, no adjuster visits the farm, and payment is determined solely by the rainfall index data for your grid point.<\/p>\n Producers select which 2-month intervals to insure across the growing season. Each interval receives a percentage of the total coverage allocation \u2014 for example, 30% in May\u2013June, 40% in July\u2013August, and 30% in September\u2013October. If only the July\u2013August interval has a rainfall deficit that triggers the index, only the 40% allocation for that interval is paid. You can distribute coverage across the season to match your hay production schedule \u2014 weight coverage in the intervals that historically produce your most valuable cuttings.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Coverage levels of 70\u201390% of the historical average rainfall are available. Higher coverage levels provide payment more frequently (triggered by less severe deficits) but cost more in premium. The 90% coverage level costs significantly more than 70% but triggers on moderate droughts that cause real yield reduction. Most hay producers who are seriously trying to protect revenue elect 85\u201390% coverage \u2014 the premium increase over 70% is modest relative to the additional protection depth.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n Whole Farm Revenue Protection insures the total revenue of all crops on a farm under a single policy. For operations where hay is one of several enterprises, WFRP may provide better coverage than crop-specific programs because it protects against revenue decline from any combination of causes \u2014 drought, price decline, or production loss on any covered commodity. The indemnity is based on Allowable Revenue, calculated from five years of Schedule F tax returns.<\/p>\n Actual Production History (APH) insurance for forage is available in specific counties for specific crops \u2014 primarily irrigated alfalfa in western states and established grass hay in some eastern and midwestern counties. Where available, APH forage insurance is the most precise coverage because it insures actual yield against the producer’s documented historical average rather than a weather index. If your actual yield falls below the insured percentage of your APH average, you receive an indemnity for the production shortfall times the price election.<\/p>\n APH coverage uses the average of up to 10 years of actual yields per practice (irrigated or non-irrigated) per crop type. New operations or operations with less than four years of records use transitional yields provided by USDA until actual history builds. To improve APH accuracy: maintain field-by-field yield records with harvest date, cutting number, and tons per acre; file records with your crop insurance agent annually at spring reporting deadlines; and never claim a yield lower than actual \u2014 the APH average directly determines your coverage level.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Search the USDA RMA Cost Estimator (rma.usda.gov\/Information-Tools\/Cost-Estimator) for your county and crop type to see which programs are available. Many counties in the western U.S. have forage APH coverage for irrigated alfalfa; coverage in the midwest and east is more limited. If your county has no APH forage program, PRF and WFRP are your primary options.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n For forage crops and specific hay operations that are not covered by any RMA insurance program in their county, USDA’s Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) provides a catastrophic-level safety net. NAP does not function like private crop insurance \u2014 it only pays when a natural disaster causes a yield loss of more than 50% below the normal county average. The payment rate is 55% of the established price \u2014 a modest recovery rate, but meaningful for total-loss events.<\/p>\n The detailed hay crop insurance comparison \u2014 including program maps, premium estimate approaches, and the production record documentation that supports all insurance programs \u2014 is in the hay crop insurance guide for forage producers<\/a>. The straw and crop residue baling market context \u2014 relevant to operations that derive revenue from both hay and straw and need to understand which commodity revenue streams require separate insurance coverage \u2014 is in the straw and crop residue baling guide<\/a>. The equipment specifications for hay operations seeking insurance documentation support are in \u8fb2\u696d\u7528\u30ae\u30a2\u30dc\u30c3\u30af\u30b9\u304a\u3088\u3073PTO\u99c6\u52d5\u7cfb\u90e8\u54c1\u306e\u4ed5\u69d8<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n No single insurance program provides complete protection for all forage revenue risks. A well-designed forage risk management strategy typically layers two or three programs to address different risk types: weather-driven yield loss (covered by PRF or APH), price and revenue risk (covered by WFRP), and catastrophic total-loss events (covered by NAP where other programs don’t apply). Building this layered approach requires planning several years in advance to accumulate the production history that higher-coverage programs require.<\/p>\n Enroll in PRF immediately \u2014 no production history required. File NAP for any crops not covered by RMA. Begin maintaining accurate Schedule F tax records and field-by-field yield logs. These records will be required for WFRP and APH in future years.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n With four or more years of Schedule F records, evaluate WFRP. Submit five years of returns to a qualified WFRP agent for a coverage and premium estimate. If WFRP coverage level and cost is favorable, enroll for the following year and maintain PRF for the weather-index layer.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Review PRF interval allocation annually based on actual rainfall patterns at your grid point. Adjust coverage levels when premium subsidies or risk profile change. Add APH forage insurance if it becomes available in your county. Discuss coordination between PRF and WFRP with your agent every two to three years to ensure no double-coverage gaps or conflicts.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n Tell us your hay production acreage, irrigated or dryland, and primary crops. We help you identify the production documentation your crop insurance program requires and the equipment records that support accurate production history reporting.<\/p>\nThe Four Main Insurance Options for Forage Producers<\/h2>\n
PRF \u2014 Pasture, Rangeland, and Forage Index Insurance<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nWFRP \u2014 Whole Farm Revenue Protection for Commercial Hay Operations<\/h2>\n
APH Forage Production Insurance: County-Specific Availability<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nNAP \u2014 Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance for Gaps in Coverage<\/h2>\n
Critical Deadlines and Common Enrollment Errors<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\n\n\n
\n \n\u30d7\u30ed\u30b0\u30e9\u30e0<\/th>\n Sales closing deadline<\/th>\n \u6ce8\u8a18<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n \n PRF (most states)<\/td>\n December 1<\/td>\n Enrolls for the following calendar year; grid selection and interval allocation must be completed by this date<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n WFRP<\/td>\n March 15 (most states)<\/td>\n Requires Schedule F records submitted with application; coverage begins after sales closing date<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n APH Forage (varies by crop)<\/td>\n Varies by crop\/state<\/td>\n Typically September\u2013March depending on crop; confirm with your crop insurance agent<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n NAP<\/td>\n Before planting date<\/td>\n Filed with FSA before crop is planted; state-specific dates for each crop type<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n Building a Complete Forage Risk Management Strategy<\/h2>\n
Hay Crop Insurance FAQs<\/h2>\n
Can I use both PRF and WFRP on the same operation simultaneously?+<\/span><\/summary>\n
My PRF did not pay even though we had a drought and my hay yield was way below normal. Why?+<\/span><\/summary>\n
Does PRF cover intentionally harvested hay or only grazed forage?+<\/span><\/summary>\n
Is crop insurance worth the premium for a small hay operation under 100 acres?+<\/span><\/summary>\n
How do I find a qualified crop insurance agent for forage programs?+<\/span><\/summary>\n
Can I insure a newly seeded alfalfa field in its establishment year?+<\/span><\/summary>\n
<\/p>\nGet Equipment and Production Documentation for Your Insurance Program<\/h3>\n