Frequently Asked Questions
What defines Wisconsin agricultural identity?
Wisconsin is the absolute undisputed dairy state in the country. The state has dominated cheese making in the United States for over a century and according to the 2025 USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service dairy reports Wisconsin produces 25 percent of all the cheese made in the country. The central and southwest counties including Marathon Dane Rock and Manitowoc hold massive dairy farms that completely drive the demand for hay corn and alfalfa.
Growing cranberries in the central marsh country of Wood Monroe and Jackson counties makes the state the absolute national leader in cranberry harvests. Marathon County also grows tons of ginseng making Wisconsin the top domestic producer. Farmers plant corn soybeans and wheat everywhere else to support the massive dairy operations.
What does Wisconsin farmland cost and what are typical cash rents?
According to the 2025 USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service report the state average for farm dirt hit $7,238 per acre. Because of this top dairy crop dirt in Dane Rock and Fond du Lac counties that grows massive corn and alfalfa runs $8,000 to $12,000 per acre. Central Wisconsin average crop dirt runs $4,500 to $7,500 per acre.
Northern Wisconsin farm dirt with rougher soil runs $2,500 to $5,000 per acre. Farmers usually pay $150 to $225 per acre every year to rent great crop dirt in the southern counties. Dairy farmers gladly pay a massive premium to rent alfalfa fields so they can feed their cows locally. Overall Wisconsin farm dirt costs less than Iowa and Illinois but stays more expensive than Michigan and Minnesota.
How does the Wisconsin dairy industry affect farmland demand?
The massive Wisconsin dairy industry completely changes how people buy and rent farm dirt because dairy cows need a never ending supply of alfalfa and cattle feed all year long. This creates a massive demand for great crop dirt sitting close to the dairy barns. Giant dairy farms milking thousands of cows need enormous grass and feed supplies so they fight incredibly hard to buy or rent any available farm dirt nearby.
This drives land prices way higher than normal within a 10 to 20 mile radius of major dairy farms in the central and southwest counties. Even though the country has fewer dairy farms overall the remaining ones are absolutely massive which keeps the land prices incredibly high in the core dairy counties regardless of national crop prices.
