Oklahoma (OK) received $4.53B across 1,078,887 USDA Farm Service Agency payments from 2017 to 2025.
Total Subsidies
$4.53B
Payments
1,078,887
Counties
100
Avg Payment
$4K
Near national avg
How Oklahoma Compares
National Rank
#11 of 59 states
Subsidy Per Capita
$1K
Share of National Total
3.1%
💡 Key Insight
Oklahoma's peak subsidy year was 2020 at $1.10B. COVID-era spending in 2020 ($1.10B) was 9.6× the 2017 baseline.
Yearly Trends
Top Programs in Oklahoma
| # | Program | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Livestock Forage Program | $1.09B |
| 2 | Price Loss Coverage Program | $528.1M |
| 3 | CFAP Round 2 | $335.9M |
| 4 | Agriculture Risk Coverage (County) | $211.8M |
| 5 | Emergency Commodity Assistance Program | $205.9M |
| 6 | CFAP CCC Payments (A) | $203.9M |
| 7 | Market Facilitation Program 2019 | $194.2M |
| 8 | Emergency Livestock Relief Program-2023-24 | $190.9M |
| 9 | CRP Annual Rental | $166.3M |
| 10 | CFAP CARES Act | $144.4M |
Top Recipients in Oklahoma
| # | Recipient | Total |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Worrell Farms Partnership | $7.9M |
| 2 | Beanland Farms | $6.6M |
| 3 | Colby C Crawford | $5.7M |
| 4 | Reinschmiedt Fam Gen Prtnrship | $5.6M |
| 5 | Neal Cattle Company,Llc | $5.4M |
| 6 | Farm Service Agency/Commodity Cre | $5.3M |
| 7 | Vinyard Farms Partnership | $4.5M |
| 8 | Farm Credit Of Western Oklahoma P | $4.3M |
| 9 | Bank Of Kremlin | $4.1M |
| 10 | Schnaithman Family Farms Gp | $3.7M |
| 11 | Steinert Farm Oper Partnership | $3.5M |
| 12 | Radcliff Farms | $3.4M |
| 13 | Moreland Farms Gp | $3.4M |
| 14 | J & J Farms | $3.3M |
| 15 | Bouziden Brothers And Sons | $3.2M |
| 16 | Bates Bros &Amp; Sons | $3.1M |
| 17 | B K Cunningham Farms Llc | $3.0M |
| 18 | V &Amp; V Partnership | $3.0M |
| 19 | Bates Bros & Sons | $2.9M |
| 20 | Farm Service Agency | $2.9M |
| 21 | Hardzog Farms | $2.8M |
| 22 | Russell Family Partnership | $2.8M |
| 23 | Hunter M'Kay Dennis | $2.8M |
| 24 | Mr Michael Wayne Mcalister | $2.7M |
| 25 | Mrs Karrie Ann Mcalister | $2.7M |
Counties in Oklahoma
| # | County | Payments | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jackson | 26,481 | $187.3M |
| 2 | Washita | 36,911 | $157.4M |
| 3 | Kiowa | 37,141 | $156.6M |
| 4 | Caddo | 35,929 | $154.5M |
| 5 | Tillman | 27,312 | $143.9M |
| 6 | Cimarron | 24,747 | $142.1M |
| 7 | Garfield | 33,107 | $138.7M |
| 8 | Texas | 28,193 | $134.9M |
| 9 | Harmon | 15,064 | $123.4M |
| 10 | Grant | 30,215 | $121.0M |
| 11 | Woods | 18,903 | $112.8M |
| 12 | Beaver | 20,484 | $109.1M |
| 13 | Alfalfa | 22,217 | $106.1M |
| 14 | Kay | 26,115 | $105.1M |
| 15 | Kingfisher | 26,933 | $104.6M |
| 16 | Custer | 23,004 | $103.2M |
| 17 | Beckham | 24,625 | $99.8M |
| 18 | Blaine | 23,287 | $94.0M |
| 19 | Greer | 20,285 | $91.2M |
| 20 | Canadian | 24,787 | $86.6M |
| 21 | Dewey | 22,115 | $83.7M |
| 22 | Major | 19,740 | $81.4M |
| 23 | Cotton | 17,069 | $79.5M |
| 24 | Noble | 21,130 | $77.1M |
| 25 | Harper | 15,913 | $76.0M |
| 26 | Grady | 23,553 | $73.9M |
| 27 | Osage | 10,732 | $69.6M |
| 28 | Woodward | 16,193 | $68.6M |
| 29 | Comanche | 16,405 | $60.9M |
| 30 | Craig | 13,516 | $60.6M |
| 31 | Roger Mills | 14,176 | $59.2M |
| 32 | Garvin | 13,118 | $54.5M |
| 33 | Ellis | 14,116 | $54.5M |
| 34 | Jefferson | 6,401 | $53.2M |
| 35 | Bryan | 12,227 | $46.2M |
| 36 | Choctaw | 7,260 | $38.4M |
| 37 | Stephens | 8,281 | $36.1M |
| 38 | Mayes | 10,876 | $36.0M |
| 39 | Logan | 11,895 | $35.3M |
| 40 | Ottawa | 9,689 | $34.8M |
| 41 | Pittsburg | 8,232 | $32.8M |
| 42 | Le Flore | 10,203 | $32.3M |
| 43 | Atoka | 8,419 | $32.3M |
| 44 | McCurtain | 9,553 | $31.6M |
| 45 | Muskogee | 9,988 | $31.4M |
| 46 | Nowata | 6,626 | $30.8M |
| 47 | Wagoner | 9,509 | $28.0M |
| 48 | Payne | 8,492 | $27.4M |
| 49 | Hughes | 7,752 | $27.2M |
| 50 | Lincoln | 9,877 | $26.0M |
| 51 | McClain | 7,085 | $26.0M |
| 52 | Rogers | 6,263 | $24.8M |
| 53 | Johnston | 7,185 | $24.5M |
| 54 | Delaware | 6,303 | $22.9M |
| 55 | Pawnee | 7,936 | $22.7M |
| 56 | Pontotoc | 7,201 | $22.0M |
| 57 | Love | 5,263 | $19.8M |
| 58 | Cherokee | 6,383 | $19.1M |
| 59 | Carter | 5,232 | $19.1M |
| 60 | Washington | 3,634 | $18.4M |
| 61 | Okmulgee | 6,413 | $18.3M |
| 62 | Coal | 3,759 | $17.5M |
| 63 | Pushmataha | 3,876 | $17.0M |
| 64 | Pottawatomie | 7,164 | $16.6M |
| 65 | Okfuskee | 6,258 | $16.6M |
| 66 | Adair | 4,949 | $16.5M |
| 67 | Murray | 3,003 | $15.5M |
| 68 | Haskell | 4,331 | $15.2M |
| 69 | Sherman | 1,659 | $14.5M |
| 70 | Sequoyah | 3,217 | $11.8M |
| 71 | Latimer | 2,458 | $10.5M |
| 72 | McIntosh | 3,392 | $10.4M |
| 73 | Creek | 4,162 | $9.8M |
| 74 | Seminole | 4,431 | $9.7M |
| 75 | Marshall | 2,823 | $9.2M |
| 76 | Tulsa | 1,871 | $8.5M |
| 77 | Oklahoma | 2,266 | $6.2M |
| 78 | Seward | 837 | $4.7M |
| 79 | Cleveland | 1,755 | $4.4M |
| 80 | Sumner | 2,174 | $4.0M |
| 81 | Baca | 1,086 | $4.0M |
| 82 | Childress | 353 | $3.8M |
| 83 | Clark | 696 | $3.3M |
| 84 | Ochiltree | 818 | $3.0M |
| 85 | Collingsworth | 1,037 | $2.7M |
| 86 | Chautauqua | 292 | $2.6M |
| 87 | Dallam | 329 | $2.5M |
| 88 | Lipscomb | 594 | $2.4M |
| 89 | Hansford | 398 | $2.2M |
| 90 | Cowley | 846 | $2.2M |
| 91 | Kit Carson | 421 | $2.2M |
| 92 | Cheyenne | 697 | $2.1M |
| 93 | Castro | 354 | $2.1M |
| 94 | Labette | 834 | $2.1M |
| 95 | Stevens | 1,032 | $2.0M |
| 96 | Morton | 937 | $2.0M |
| 97 | Barber | 424 | $2.0M |
| 98 | Meade | 625 | $1.9M |
| 99 | Wichita | 661 | $1.8M |
| 100 | Prowers | 604 | $1.6M |
📊 Understanding Oklahoma's Farm Subsidies
From 2017 to 2025, Oklahoma received $4.53B in USDA farm subsidy payments — ranking #11 out of 59 states and territories. The state's largest program was Livestock Forage Program at $1.09B, followed by Price Loss Coverage Program at $528.1M. Payments flowed to recipients across 100 counties.
The average payment in Oklahoma ($4K) is close to the national average of $5K.
This data comes from USDA FSA payment files covering 2017–2025. Compare Oklahoma with other states using our comparison tool, see state rankings, or explore why some states get more.