Prevented planting coverage provides producers valuable protection in the event they are unable to plant an insured crop by the final planting date or during the late planting period due to an insured cause of loss. When adverse weather prevents planting, a prevented planting payment is made to compensate for the producer’s pre-planting costs generally incurred in preparation for planting the crop.
The amount of prevented planting coverage is calculated as a percent of the insurance guarantee the insured would have had for a timely planted crop. For example, suppose a producer’s insurance guarantee is $100 an acre. If the producer insures a crop with a 60% prevented planting coverage factor, the prevented planting payment would be $60 (or 60% of the guarantee). The prevented planting factor varies by crop, based on an estimate of pre-planting costs.
Prevented planting coverage factors are designed to provide protection based on pre-planting costs generally incurred up to the point of planting the crop. Fixed and variable costs, established from available national and state crop budgets, are compared to average insurance guarantees to establish prevented planting coverage factors.
These costs can include purchase of machinery, land rent, fertilizer, actions taken to ready the field, pesticide, labor, and repairs. The prevented planting factor is a percentage of the individual insurance guarantee and varies by crop, based on an estimate of pre-planting costs.
The prevented planting coverage levels are listed by crop and county in the Actuarial Information Browser.
RMA commissioned a third-party evaluation of prevented planting coverage, which provided recommendations for how to determine prevented planting coverage factors. The evaluation was completed in January of 2015 and is available on RMA’s website.
RMA made the evaluation available for public comment and received 27 comments from 16 commenters. The commenters identified questions about the time frame used in the evaluation, the method of how the deductible is accounted for, and the allocation of total planting costs to the pre-planting stage.
After taking into consideration the evaluation and comments, RMA determined appropriate revisions to the method for determining prevented planting coverage factors. RMA reviews the prevented planting coverage factors on a 6-year cycle.
Additional detail on the revisions, and their impact on the prevented planting coverage factors is available on RMA’s website.
While pre-plant production costs may be similar; the prevented planting coverage factors are determined using the crop’s average insurance liability. Thus, crops with higher insurance liabilities (for example—specialty-type commodities) often have lower prevented planting coverage factors. The method for establishing the factors is consistent for all commodities.
In this instance, FSA and RMA data will not match, nor are they required to match. For crop insurance, producers file claims for their “intended” plantings; however, actual payments are based on the number of eligible acres of the crop. For example, you can’t claim 1000 acres of corn if you have never planted 1000 acres of corn. The FSA prevented planting eligibility rules are different. For FSA reporting purposes, the actual prevented planting crop and acres are required. So, when “rolled acres” are applied for crop insurance, the RMA and FSA data will not match.
You may be eligible for a 100% prevented planting payment on corn if 1) you have history of planting both crops in the field in the same year or 2) you can provide proof you intended to plant corn on the acreage (including, but not limited to inputs purchased, applied or available to apply, or that acreage was part of a crop rotation).
If you don’t meet either of these criteria for corn, you may still be eligible for a prevented planting payment on soybeans, if all other policy provisions are met.
Note: If the soybeans were planted after the late planting period for corn, the 20 planted acres would instead be considered a second crop of soybeans, and the first crop of corn would have its prevented planting payment reduced to 35%. The 20 unplanted acres of corn would receive the full prevented planting payment for corn.
Prevented planting coverage is not provided under the terms of the ARPI policy. Any corn acreage initially planted after the final planting date must be reported as uninsurable. However, if you have another crop insurance policy that offers individual coverage such as revenue protection or yield protection, you may be able to plant a different crop and insure it under the terms of that policy provided you meet all other eligibility requirements.
No. A producer may rely on advice and experience from several sources in selecting their cover crop for planting. There is not a requirement for NRCS to review and approve their selection and planting decision.
If the acres were enrolled in CRP after the final planting date for the crop prevented from being planted, there would be no reduction in the prevented planting payment.
Prevented planting covers drought, including multi-year droughts. However, coverage is limited to losses caused by the effects of drought in the current crop year. Multi-year droughts could reduce the amount of acreage qualifying for prevented planting if the amount of irrigation water available in a previous crop year could not be replaced, based on normal weather in the insurance period. Only the acres that could have been irrigated under normal weather conditions during the insurance period are eligible for prevented planting in the current crop year. For carryover policyholders, the insurance period for prevented planting begins on the sales closing date for the previous crop year if insurance has been in force continuously since that date. For new policyholders, the insurance period for prevented planting begins on the sales closing date for the current crop year. For more information, please refer to RMA’s Frequently Asked Questions on Prevented Planting – Drought.
For acreage to be eligible for PP coverage, it must be available for planting and meet the “1 in 4 rule.” The “1 in 4 rule” states that land must be planted, insured, and harvested in at least one of the four most recent crop years.
Yes, if due to normal crop rotation, you destroyed the forage and prepared the field for seeding, but due to an insurable cause of loss were unable to plant, the annual regrowth of the perennial forage crop is considered planted for the purposes of the “1 in 4 rule.”
Yes. Your acreage meets the “insured” requirement if the crop planted is insured under NAP.
The acreage qualifies for an exception of the “insured” requirement if you can prove the acreage was planted and harvested using good farming practices in at least two consecutive years out of the four previous years.
Producers have options when planting forage on prevented planting acreage without impacting their prevented planting payments. The below example is for a 2021 prevented planting situation that will not reduce the prevented planting payment.
Producers can:
- Plant forage as a cover crop. The cover crop:
- must be planted and managed according to agricultural expert guidelines including seeding rates, input rates, and NRCS termination dates; and
- can be hayed, grazed, or cut for silage, haylage or baleage at any time.
- Plant a 2022 forage crop with the following options:
- Not insure the forage crop.
- There are no planting date or harvest restrictions; and
- The crop is considered a first crop, regardless of insurance coverage, for the 2022 crop year.
- Insure the forage under a 2022 Forage Seeding policy. If a producer plants a 2022 alfalfa (or other insurable perennial type) crop and choose to insure it with a Forage Seeding policy, they should consult with their crop insurance agent for all details regarding policy provisions and dates for their local area. Producers should consider the following:
- The Forage Seeding policy does not insure a crop that is grown with the intent to be grazed or grazed at any time during the insurance period.
- Earliest planting dates vary by region.
- Final planting dates vary by region.
- End of insurance dates and harvesting restrictions vary by region and by special provision.
- Insure the alfalfa (or other insurable perennial type) under a 2023 forage production policy. If producers choose to insure the forage crop with a 2023 forage production policy, insurance attaches after the stand passes an initial inspection. Sales closing dates vary by region.
- Insure the alfalfa (or other insurable perennial grass mixture) under both a 2022 forage seeding policy and a 2023 forage production policy.
- Not insure the forage crop.
Contact your crop insurance agent for questions concerning future coverage unique to your location and operation.
A cover crop is a crop generally recognized by agricultural experts as agronomically sound for the area for erosion control or other purposes related to conservation or soil improvement. Please visit RMA’s website for more information concerning cover crops.
Producers should maintain all documentation regarding recommendations from agricultural experts (cover crop selection, seeding rate, etc.) For example, documentation could include published materials from agricultural experts that are applicable for the area or an individual assessment from an agricultural expert for a specific cover crop management practice. Producers must be able to provide such documentation to their crop insurance company upon request.
As defined in the Common Crop Insurance Provisions, Basic Provisions, an agricultural expert includes persons who are employed by the Cooperative Extension System or the agricultural departments of universities, or other persons approved by FCIC, whose research or occupation is related to the specific crop or practice for which such expertise is sought.
Note: Persons who have a personal or financial interest in the insured or the crop will not qualify as an agricultural expert.
Yes, these acres may be enrolled in an NRCS program, such as EQIP and maintain prevented planting coverage. Normal cover crop procedures would apply.
No. In accordance with the Special Provisions, corn is not considered a cover crop for crop insurance purposes and will be considered a crop planted for harvest.
If a cover crop is on the acreage in the spring and the acreage is prevented from being planted, you may reseed the current cover crop on the acreage using good farming practices. However, the cover crop will need to be destroyed within 12 months of the initial establishment date or it will be considered an established crop. Insured crops generally cannot be planted into an established forage crop. Review the crop provisions of the insured crop for more information.
You may hay, graze, or cut the cover crop for silage, haylage, or baleage and your prevented planting payment will not be affected. Corn planted on acreage following a prevented planting claim will be considered planted for harvest.
The insured may still be eligible for 100% of the prevented planting payment, provided the act of haying the cover crop did not contribute to the acreage being prevented from planting.
For example: a cover crop was planted last fall and wet weather in the spring prevents the insured from planting corn by the final planting date; the cover crop can be hayed, grazed, or cut of silage, haylage, or baleage without impacting the corn prevented planting payment.