Pro Farmer Crop Tour 2026

The Pro Farmer Crop Tour provides insights into potential corn and soybean production and gathers scout reporting from 2,000+ fields across Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio and South Dakota.

Watch Nightly Results

August 17-20, 2026: Tune in here to watch nightly results and analysis starting at 7:55 PM Central.

The Pro Farmer Crop Tour Route

The Pro Farmer Crop Tour 2026 takes place August 17-20, 2026. It simultaneously follows an Eastern and a Western route, with both scouting routes culminating in Rochester, Minnesota. Nightly meetings in each location review daily results, scouting observations and historical comparison data. Attend nightly meetings in person or watch the nightly broadcast online at AgWeb.com/croptour.

EASTERN TOUR

August 17 – Noblesville, IN
Embassy Suites Noblesville Indianapolis Conference Center

August 18 – Bloomington, IL
DoubleTree by Hilton

August 19 – Riverside, IA
Riverside Casino & Golf Resort

August 20 – Rochester, MN
Mayo Civic Center

WESTERN TOUR

August 17 – Grand Island, NE
Riverside Golf Club

August 18 – Nebraska City, NE
Lied Lodge

August 19 – Spencer, IA
Clay County Fair and Events Center

August 20 – Rochester, MN
Mayo Civic Center

Pro Farmer Crop Tour News
Extreme weather situations, including the annual Derecho, hit regions on the eastern leg earlier this year. While the eastern Corn Belt isn’t as dry as its western counterpart, yield potential looks lower than 2021.
Tuesday’s Crop Tour trek through Nebraska and Indiana gave scouts a glimpse at the moderate to exceptional drought Mother Nature has brought down on soil and crops this growing season.
Pro Farmer estimates the U.S. corn crop at 13.759 billion bushels, with an average yield of 168.1 bu. per acre, and the U.S. soybean crop at 4.535 billion bushels, with an average yield of 51.7 bu. per acre.
USDA’s crop production report showed an increase in soybean yields, but a lower national corn yield. Analysts say Pro Farmer Crop Tour next will reveal more answers about this year’s crops and could be a market mover.
Get your day started with a brief rundown of key news.
Crop Conditions News
High disease pressure and moisture variability could make for a tricky fall harvest season in the Midwest. Lean on these crucial combine settings adjustments to help you hang onto as many kernels as possible.
Kernel depth and fill contribute significantly to yield in newer hybrids. It’s one reason a ‘Hail Mary’ fungicide pass might still offer ROI and keep corn standing until combines roll.
A prematurely collapsing ear shank stops grain fill, leading to yield reductions that can reach as high as 40%.
The Midwest crop is being pushed into black layer (R6) prematurely in some areas in ways that are easy to confuse with normal drydown factors.
The disease is causing turmoil for farmers who have a large crop in the making. In some cases, a Hail Mary fungicide application at R4 up to early dent (R5) might make sense this season, say agronomists.
Pro Farmer Analysis
EPA has already announced granting dozens of SREs and partial exemptions.
Combined, this rule will impact over two billion gallons of renewable fuels demand.
Shares of U.S. biofuel companies have slumped.
Oil prices have held fairly steady recently, thanks to a generally level supply and demand balance.
USDA’s September 2025 net farm income forecast projects net farm income will rise sharply from 2024.
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