Kansas (KS) received $8.57B across 2,290,634 USDA Farm Service Agency payments from 2017 to 2025.
Total Subsidies
$8.57B
Payments
2,290,634
Counties
100
Avg Payment
$4K
19% below national avg
How Kansas Compares
National Rank
#3 of 59 states
Subsidy Per Capita
$3K
Share of National Total
5.8%
💡 Key Insight
Kansas's peak subsidy year was 2020 at $1.92B. COVID-era spending in 2020 ($1.92B) was 5.8× the 2017 baseline.
Yearly Trends
Top Programs in Kansas
| # | Program | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Price Loss Coverage Program | $1.02B |
| 2 | Market Facilitation Program 2019 | $976.5M |
| 3 | Agriculture Risk Coverage (County) | $949.6M |
| 4 | Emergency Commodity Assistance Program | $714.7M |
| 5 | CRP Annual Rental | $668.5M |
| 6 | CFAP Round 2 | $665.0M |
| 7 | Supp Disaster Relief Non-Spec Crops 1 | $631.3M |
| 8 | Market Facilitation Program (Crops) | $523.0M |
| 9 | Livestock Forage Program | $484.5M |
| 10 | Cfap3 — Tup | $392.6M |
Top Recipients in Kansas
| # | Recipient | Total |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tim Dewey Farms | $7.0M |
| 2 | Homestead Farms | $7.0M |
| 3 | Spring Creek Family Farms | $6.6M |
| 4 | Clawson Ranch Partnership | $6.5M |
| 5 | Cott Family Farms | $6.0M |
| 6 | Fischer Irrigation | $5.8M |
| 7 | Alfalfa Farms | $5.2M |
| 8 | Morning Star Farms | $4.6M |
| 9 | J D M Farms | $4.5M |
| 10 | Clawson Land Partnership | $4.4M |
| 11 | F D K Partnership | $4.3M |
| 12 | Quad K Farms | $4.2M |
| 13 | Southwest Family Farms | $4.2M |
| 14 | Double Diamond Ag | $4.0M |
| 15 | Tdn Farms | $4.0M |
| 16 | Dry Lake Farms | $3.8M |
| 17 | Winsome Farms Gp | $3.7M |
| 18 | Klc Farm | $3.7M |
| 19 | Evans Farms Enterprises | $3.7M |
| 20 | Rooney Farms | $3.6M |
| 21 | Homeland Farms | $3.6M |
| 22 | Hendricks Bros Partnership | $3.6M |
| 23 | Bryant Farms | $3.6M |
| 24 | 4-D Farms | $3.5M |
| 25 | Legacy H Farms | $3.3M |
Counties in Kansas
| # | County | Payments | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gray | 25,969 | $170.6M |
| 2 | Thomas | 24,118 | $155.0M |
| 3 | Reno | 52,899 | $153.1M |
| 4 | Sumner | 49,655 | $147.5M |
| 5 | Finney | 22,446 | $147.4M |
| 6 | Sheridan | 23,151 | $141.5M |
| 7 | Scott | 19,303 | $139.5M |
| 8 | Ford | 24,259 | $134.0M |
| 9 | Dickinson | 43,800 | $124.0M |
| 10 | Sherman | 21,882 | $123.1M |
| 11 | Nemaha | 25,328 | $123.1M |
| 12 | McPherson | 48,520 | $122.1M |
| 13 | Mitchell | 25,960 | $121.3M |
| 14 | Stanton | 17,850 | $114.6M |
| 15 | Marion | 39,947 | $113.1M |
| 16 | Kearny | 20,336 | $112.0M |
| 17 | Washington | 34,563 | $111.3M |
| 18 | Pratt | 30,478 | $110.3M |
| 19 | Ness | 31,710 | $109.9M |
| 20 | Stevens | 24,394 | $106.7M |
| 21 | Barton | 33,937 | $106.6M |
| 22 | Haskell | 15,137 | $106.4M |
| 23 | Jewell | 23,470 | $104.7M |
| 24 | Meade | 19,720 | $103.0M |
| 25 | Wichita | 18,407 | $102.7M |
| 26 | Hamilton | 19,136 | $102.5M |
| 27 | Sedgwick | 40,871 | $102.5M |
| 28 | Rice | 31,176 | $102.4M |
| 29 | Marshall | 36,318 | $101.6M |
| 30 | Kingman | 36,796 | $101.4M |
| 31 | Harvey | 37,595 | $101.4M |
| 32 | Clay | 26,649 | $100.9M |
| 33 | Butler | 27,220 | $100.5M |
| 34 | Lane | 17,538 | $98.8M |
| 35 | Greeley | 17,309 | $96.7M |
| 36 | Stafford | 28,667 | $96.2M |
| 37 | Logan | 16,712 | $95.4M |
| 38 | Republic | 24,432 | $94.4M |
| 39 | Smith | 23,835 | $93.9M |
| 40 | Edwards | 21,042 | $93.8M |
| 41 | Rawlins | 19,268 | $93.3M |
| 42 | Hodgeman | 22,442 | $93.2M |
| 43 | Pawnee | 25,582 | $92.1M |
| 44 | Kiowa | 20,842 | $91.2M |
| 45 | Cloud | 24,104 | $89.1M |
| 46 | Brown | 17,269 | $88.9M |
| 47 | Phillips | 21,118 | $88.9M |
| 48 | Clark | 14,388 | $88.6M |
| 49 | Cowley | 29,597 | $88.1M |
| 50 | Harper | 21,916 | $85.5M |
| 51 | Norton | 17,006 | $85.2M |
| 52 | Saline | 29,607 | $83.1M |
| 53 | Russell | 26,143 | $82.7M |
| 54 | Rooks | 22,862 | $81.6M |
| 55 | Ellis | 30,270 | $81.6M |
| 56 | Graham | 22,205 | $80.9M |
| 57 | Rush | 26,514 | $80.6M |
| 58 | Osborne | 22,186 | $80.3M |
| 59 | Lincoln | 23,884 | $79.7M |
| 60 | Cheyenne | 18,635 | $78.8M |
| 61 | Cherokee | 25,589 | $76.2M |
| 62 | Grant | 20,471 | $76.1M |
| 63 | Labette | 24,993 | $75.9M |
| 64 | Trego | 19,143 | $75.6M |
| 65 | Wallace | 12,054 | $74.2M |
| 66 | Ellsworth | 23,074 | $74.0M |
| 67 | Seward | 15,117 | $73.8M |
| 68 | Montgomery | 20,046 | $71.2M |
| 69 | Crawford | 27,673 | $71.1M |
| 70 | Decatur | 14,716 | $67.8M |
| 71 | Morton | 16,352 | $65.7M |
| 72 | Coffey | 26,878 | $62.4M |
| 73 | Lyon | 22,019 | $61.8M |
| 74 | Ottawa | 19,104 | $60.9M |
| 75 | Osage | 23,006 | $59.3M |
| 76 | Anderson | 21,477 | $57.3M |
| 77 | Barber | 10,493 | $57.3M |
| 78 | Doniphan | 12,608 | $55.8M |
| 79 | Gove | 10,064 | $53.9M |
| 80 | Wilson | 15,605 | $53.7M |
| 81 | Franklin | 22,064 | $53.1M |
| 82 | Morris | 14,648 | $53.0M |
| 83 | Allen | 18,356 | $52.6M |
| 84 | Neosho | 18,168 | $50.0M |
| 85 | Pottawatomie | 15,688 | $46.6M |
| 86 | Linn | 16,745 | $44.9M |
| 87 | Atchison | 13,135 | $42.2M |
| 88 | Jackson | 15,639 | $40.9M |
| 89 | Bourbon | 14,989 | $40.3M |
| 90 | Greenwood | 8,427 | $40.0M |
| 91 | Jefferson | 13,818 | $39.5M |
| 92 | Miami | 15,542 | $36.3M |
| 93 | Riley | 10,910 | $30.3M |
| 94 | Douglas | 14,976 | $27.8M |
| 95 | Wabaunsee | 9,615 | $27.1M |
| 96 | Shawnee | 14,221 | $27.0M |
| 97 | Chase | 5,722 | $24.7M |
| 98 | Woodson | 6,827 | $23.5M |
| 99 | Texas | 7,373 | $23.0M |
| 100 | Johnson | 6,672 | $19.1M |
📊 Understanding Kansas's Farm Subsidies
From 2017 to 2025, Kansas received $8.57B in USDA farm subsidy payments — ranking #3 out of 59 states and territories. The state's largest program was Price Loss Coverage Program at $1.02B, followed by Market Facilitation Program 2019 at $976.5M. Payments flowed to recipients across 100 counties.
The average payment in Kansas ($4K) is close to the national average of $5K.
This data comes from USDA FSA payment files covering 2017–2025. Compare Kansas with other states using our comparison tool, see state rankings, or explore why some states get more.