2026 Purdue Crop Cost and Return Guide

March 23, 2026

PAER-2026-08

Author: Michael Langemeier, Professor of Agricultural Economics

The 2026 Purdue Crop Cost and Return Guide, available for free download from the Center for Commercial Agriculture website, provides estimated costs for planting, growing, and harvesting a variety of crops, along with estimated contribution margins and earnings. The guide is updated frequently as grain futures prices change and the costs of inputs, such as seed, fertilizer, pesticides and fuel, fluctuate. This paper discusses estimates made in early January.

The guide presents cost and return information for low-, average-, and high-productivity soils. Table 1 presents crop budget information for low-productivity soil. Tables 2 and 3 present crop budget information for average and productivity soils, respectively. The discussion in this paper will focus on the estimates for average- and high-productivity soils. Double-crop soybeans are typically planted after wheat, so it is common to combine the contribution margins for these two crops when comparing them to continuous corn, rotation corn, and rotation soybeans. The yield estimates reflect trend yields for Indiana for each crop. The contribution margin for average productivity soil, obtained by subtracting total variable cost from market revenue, was $116 per acre for continuous corn and $216 per acre for wheat/double-crop soybeans. The contribution margins for rotation corn and rotation soybeans on average productivity soil are $202 and $263 per acre, respectively. The contribution margin is used to cover overhead costs, such as machinery ownership costs, family and hired labor, and cash rent.

From 2007 to 2013, the contribution margin for rotation corn on average-productivity soil was higher than the contribution margin for rotation soybeans. The average difference in the contribution margin was $38 per acre during the 2007 to 2013 period. The situation was considerably different from 2014 to 2025. The average difference in the contribution margin during this period was an advantage for soybeans of $65 per acre. The projected difference in contribution margins on average productivity soil between corn and soybeans for 2026 is $61 per acre in favor of rotation soybeans. The projected difference in contribution margins between soybeans and corn is larger on low-productivity soil and smaller on high-productivity soil.

Projected cost of production and breakeven prices for corn and soybeans in 2026 are very similar to those experienced in 2025. Breakeven price per bushel on average-productivity soil is expected to be $5.34 for corn and $12.47 for soybeans. Breakeven prices remain elevated compared to those experienced prior to COVID-19. Projected breakeven prices for corn and soybeans are 20% and 15% higher than the corn and soybean breakeven prices in 2021.

Corn breakeven prices for 2026 for low- and high-productivity soils are expected to be $5.68 and $4.94 per bushel, respectively. For soybeans, 2026 breakeven prices on low- and high-productivity soils are projected at $13.31 and $11.73 per bushel, respectively.

Expected corn and soybean prices, estimated using futures prices and the long-run average basis, are substantially below breakeven prices, even for high-productivity soils. As a result, projected 2026 earnings are well below zero. In the long run, earnings are approximately zero. When earnings are positive, owned assets such as machinery, buildings, and land, as well as unpaid operator labor, garner net returns above their opportunity cost (i.e., the value of the next best alternative). Negative earnings, on the other hand, indicate that owned assets and unpaid labor are receiving a net return that is below their opportunity cost.

What are the potential implications or consequences of the projected negative earnings in 2026? First, we would expect machinery and building purchases to be lower than they would be in a year with higher earnings (e.g., 2021 and 2022). In other words, depreciation is likely to be larger than machinery and building purchases in 2026. Second, we expect cash rents to be stable or experience downward pressure. Downward pressure is particularly likely, given the fact that earnings were also relatively low in 2024 and 2025.

In summary, margins are expected to be relatively tight again in 2026. Net returns for rotation soybeans are expected to be slightly higher than net returns for rotation corn. Thus, we would not expect continuous corn to be very prevalent in Indiana this year. The relatively high-cost structure, along with tight margins, increases the importance of carefully scrutinizing input and crop decisions, particularly those related to cash rent negotiations. Producers are encouraged to create crop budgets and, in general, improve their record-keeping.

Table 1

2026 Purdue Crop Budget for Low-Productivity Soil

Continuous Corn

Rotation Corn

Rotation Soybeans

Wheat

Double-Crop Soybeans

Expected Yield per Acre

158

168

51

72

36

Harvest Price

4.35

4.35

10.20

4.95

10.20

Market Revenue

$687

$731

$520

$356

$367

Less Variable Costs

Fertilizer

227

207

81

120

56

Seed

102

102

74

44

86

Pesticides

115

110

70

45

63

Dryer Fuel

45

36

0

0

5

Machinery Fuel

20

20

12

12

9

Machinery Repairs

45

45

40

40

40

Hauling

17

18

5

8

4

Interest

25

24

14

13

12

Insurance and Miscellaneous

50

50

40

30

10

Total Variable Costs

$646

$612

$336

$312

$285

Contribution Margin

$41

$119

$184

$44

$82

Government Payments

$50

$50

$50

$50

$0

Overhead Costs (Land, Labor, and Machinery Ownership)

$353

$343

$343

$343

$0

Earnings

-$262

-$174

-$109

-$249

$82

Breakeven Price

$6.32

$5.68

$13.31

$9.10

$7.92

Source: ID-166-W, 2026 Purdue Crop Cost and Return Guide, January 2026 estimates

 

Table 2

2026 Purdue Crop Budget for Average-Productivity Soil

Continuous Corn

Rotation Corn

Rotation Soybeans

Wheat

Double-Crop Soybeans

Expected Yield per Acre

186

198

60

85

42

Harvest Price

4.35

4.35

10.20

4.95

10.20

Market Revenue

$809

$861

$612

$421

$428

Less Variable Costs

Fertilizer

240

221

93

146

64

Seed

124

124

74

44

86

Pesticides

115

110

70

45

63

Dryer Fuel

52

42

0

0

5

Machinery Fuel

20

20

12

12

9

Machinery Repairs

45

45

40

40

40

Hauling

20

21

6

9

4

Interest

27

26

14

14

12

Insurance and Miscellaneous

50

50

40

30

10

Total Variable Costs

$693

$659

$349

$340

$293

Contribution Margin

$116

$202

$263

$81

$135

Government Payments

$50

$50

$50

$50

$0

Overhead Costs (Land, Labor, and Machinery Ownership)

$409

$399

$399

$399

$0

Earnings

-$243

-$147

-$86

-$268

$135

Breakeven Price

$5.92

$5.34

$12.47

$8.69

$6.98

Source: ID-166-W, 2026 Purdue Crop Cost and Return Guide, January 2026 estimates

 

Table 3

2026 Purdue Crop Budget for High-Productivity Soil

Continuous Corn

Rotation Corn

Rotation Soybeans

Wheat

Double-Crop Soybeans

Expected Yield per Acre

217

231

70

99

49

Harvest Price

4.35

4.35

10.20

4.95

10.20

Market Revenue

$944

$1,005

$714

$490

$500

Less Variable Costs

Fertilizer

254

236

106

175

73

Seed

124

124

74

44

86

Pesticides

115

110

70

45

63

Dryer Fuel

61

49

0

0

6

Machinery Fuel

20

20

12

12

9

Machinery Repairs

45

45

40

40

40

Hauling

23

24

7

10

5

Interest

28

27

15

16

13

Insurance and Miscellaneous

50

50

40

30

10

Total Variable Costs

$720

$685

$364

$372

$305

Contribution Margin

$224

$320

$350

$118

$195

Government Payments

$50

$50

$50

$50

$0

Overhead Costs (Land, Labor, and Machinery Ownership)

$467

$457

$457

$457

$0

Earnings

-$193

-$87

-$57

-$289

$195

Breakeven Price

$5.47

$4.94

$11.73

$8.37

$6.22

Source: ID-166-W, 2026 Purdue Crop Cost and Return Guide, January 2026 estimates

 

Tags

Publication Appeared Within:

Latest Articles:

Commodity Prices at the Crossroads: Trade Policy, the Iran Conflict, and the 2026 U.S. Grain Markets

May 5, 2026

Three forces interact to shape the 2026 commodity price outlook: (1) the trade policy headwind created by tariffs and retaliatory measures that suppress the transmission of supply tightening into higher U.S. export prices; (2) a biofuel demand tailwind that works through domestic markets and is strengthened by elevated oil prices and renewable fuels policy; and (3) the emerging El Niño climate pattern that elevates production uncertainty in both the U.S. and global crops.

READ MORE

The March 2026 Producer Price Index: Reading the Food Price Pipeline

April 16, 2026

The Bureau of Labor Statistics collects Producer Price Index (PPI) prices on the Tuesday of the week containing the 13th of each month. The March survey date was March 10. The Iran conflict began on February 28, making March 10 exactly ten days post-onset. The February survey date was February 10 — eighteen days before the conflict began – but well within the window of pre-conflict rhetoric and US troop buildup in the region.

READ MORE

The March 2026 CPI Report: What It Tells Us About the Iran Conflict’s Inflation Footprint — And What Is Still Coming

April 13, 2026

The March 2026 CPI report confirms what the structural analysis predicted: the Iran Conflict’s initial consumer price impact is concentrated in motor fuels, which respond to crude oil prices with almost no lag. The 0.9 percent monthly CPI increase is large by recent standards — the largest monthly increase since mid-2022, but it is not yet the broad-based food and goods inflation that a prolonged Strait of Hormuz disruption will eventually produce.

READ MORE