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
Brad Kooima of Kooima Kooima Varilek says live and feeder cattle futures gapped lower on the opening after a human case of New World screwworm (NWS) was announced over the weekend.
Pro Farmer economist Lane Akre says corn and soybeans posted higher weekly closes and should be able to build on that next week with the push from the lower yield and production estimates from the Pro Farmer Crop Tour.
On the heels of Crop Tour, Pro Farmer projects corn yields at 6.1 bu. below USDA’s August estimate, while soybean yield numbers are nearly aligned.
The Minnesota corn crop is going for gold. Pro Farmer Crop Tour scouts expect the crop will reach a record 202.86 bu. average, if it can outpace southern rust and tar spot. Scouts peg the Iowa corn crop at a 198.43 bu. average, but it also faces disease challenges.
The Minnesota corn crop may break records while Iowa crops face disease challenges.
Crop Conditions News
As June closed on a wetter note for portions of the Midwest, three agricultural meteorologists forecast July, indicating continued rains for the corn crop in some areas, but drastic drought areas growing even drier.
USDA’s weekly Crop Progress Report shows the U.S. corn crop is rated 64% good to excellent, the same as a week ago but off by 7 percentage points versus 2020. Soybean ratings nationally declined, but only by 1 point.
Wet weather forecasts across the Midwest caused commodity prices to tank Tuesday, with soybean oil and corn hitting the daily limits lower. Much of the Midwest is forecast to receive rain at key pollination time.
Rains continue to fall across portions of the Midwest this week, a sign one ag meteorologist says could mean Midwestern drought conditions have peaked. However, the news isn’t as promising for the northern Corn Belt.
Areas of the Corn Belt in need of moisture are finally seeing rain this week, but it came with severe crop damage to portions of Iowa after hail wiped out some farm fields this week.
Pro Farmer Analysis
From Pro Farmer’s First Thing Today, these are some of the stories we are watching on Thursday, April 15.
From Pro Farmer’s First Thing Today, these are some of the stories we are watching on Friday, April 16.
From Pro Farmer’s First Thing Today, these are some of the stories we are watching on Wednesday, April 14.
From Pro Farmer’s First Thing Today, these are some of the stories we are watching on Tuesday, April 20.
From Pro Farmer’s First Thing Today, these are some of the stories we are watching on Wednesday, April 21.
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