Protect your harvest from the unpredictable South Dakota growing season.
Crop insurance is a federally backed program administered through private insurance companies. The federal government subsidizes a portion of the premium, making it affordable, but the program itself is complex with many options:
Crop insurance is one of the most technically complex insurance products there is. Here's where producers run into trouble:
South Dakota is one of the top states in the country for crop insurance participation — and for good reason:
Here's something most people don't realize about crop insurance: the federal program is sold through private companies, and the premiums are the same regardless of which company you buy from. The policy is identical. What's not identical is the agent.
An independent agent who writes with multiple crop insurance companies can help you choose the carrier with the best claims service in your area. They can also coordinate your federal crop insurance with private crop-hail coverage from a different carrier to get you the best overall program.
More importantly, a good crop insurance agent earns their keep during claims. They help you document losses, work with adjusters, and navigate the federal rules that determine your payout. When you're dealing with a hail-flattened cornfield or a prevented planting situation, the quality of your agent matters enormously.
Crop insurance decisions have real dollar consequences. These questions will help you make sure your program is set up right:
For most spring-planted crops in South Dakota — including corn and soybeans — the sales closing date is March 15. That's the deadline to buy, change, or cancel federal crop insurance for that crop year. Miss it and you're locked out until the following year, so review your coverage with your agent well before then.
No — the federal program sets identical premiums no matter which company or agent you buy from. What differs is the agent: their service, their claims support, and their ability to pair your federal policy with private crop-hail coverage. Choosing an experienced independent agent is the one variable actually in your control.
Often, yes. Federal crop insurance covers hail, but only after your deductible — at a 75% coverage level you absorb the first 25% of the loss. In South Dakota's hail belt, private crop-hail insurance (which usually has no deductible) fills that gap. Given how frequently hail hits here, most producers carry both.
Crop insurance protects your harvest — farm insurance protects everything else: buildings, equipment, livestock, and liability.
If your ag operation includes commercial activities like custom work or grain handling, business coverage may apply.
Connect with an independent agent in your area who can help with all your coverage needs.