Comprehensive coverage for South Dakota's agricultural operations.
A farm policy isn't just homeowners insurance with a barn added on. It's a specialized package built for agricultural operations, combining property, liability, and operational coverage under one umbrella:
Farm insurance is more complex than almost any other type of coverage. Here's where South Dakota producers most often end up underinsured:
Agriculture is the backbone of South Dakota's economy, and the risks here are significant:
Farm and ranch insurance is where a captive agent's limitations become most obvious. A captive agent has one company's farm program — take it or leave it. An independent agent writes with multiple farm carriers and can piece together coverage from different companies to match your exact operation.
That matters because no two farms are alike. A 5,000-acre row crop operation in the James River Valley has completely different needs than a 10,000-acre cattle ranch in the Badlands. An independent agent has the carrier options to build a program for either — or for the mixed operation that does both.
Many of South Dakota's independent agents grew up in agriculture. They understand the urgency when a storm takes out a bin of grain or a blizzard kills calves. They pick up the phone, get the adjuster out, and fight for your claim.
Farm insurance is complex. These questions will help you and your agent make sure nothing falls through the cracks:
Homeowners insurance covers a house and personal belongings. A farm policy does that too, but adds the pieces a working operation needs — barns and outbuildings, machinery, livestock, stored grain, and farm liability. If you run any kind of agricultural operation, a farm policy is almost always the right fit; a standard homeowners policy will leave major gaps.
There's no flat rate — it depends on your buildings, equipment values, livestock, acreage, and the liability exposures specific to your operation. A small hobby farm is a fraction of the cost of a 5,000-acre row-crop or cattle operation. Because farm carriers price these very differently, comparing across companies through an independent agent usually makes a meaningful difference.
Yes — farm machinery and equipment can be covered either on a scheduled basis (each item listed with its own value) or blanket (a single limit for everything). The key is keeping those values current; equipment prices have risen sharply, and a combine insured at a five-year-old value can leave you badly short after a loss.
Protect your harvest from hail, drought, and market loss with federal and private crop coverage.
Your farm dwelling may be covered under a farm policy or a separate homeowners policy — make sure there are no gaps.
Connect with an independent agent in your area who can help with all your coverage needs.