Key Takeaways
- Revenue Protection locks in the higher of projected or harvest price — you're covered even if prices recover
- Yield Protection uses only the projected price — if prices drop at harvest, your indemnity is lower than with RP
- RP with Harvest Price Exclusion (RP-HPE) is a middle option — lower cost than full RP, uses projected price only like YP
- Most Corn Belt farmers choose RP for corn and soybeans
- YP may make sense when commodity prices are stable and you want to minimize premium cost
The Core Difference: What Happens When Prices Drop
The fundamental distinction between RP and YP only matters in one scenario: when commodity prices at harvest are lower than they were at planting. In all other scenarios — good yields and prices, or yield loss with stable prices — both policies pay very similarly.
Here's the critical insight: RP uses the higher of the projected price or the harvest price to calculate your indemnity. YP uses only the projected price. If corn falls from $5.00 at planting to $4.00 at harvest, RP calculates your guarantee using $5.00. YP also uses $5.00 in its revenue guarantee calculation — but if you have a yield shortfall, the loss is measured using the lower $4.00 harvest price, which means a smaller indemnity check.
Full Comparison: RP vs. RP-HPE vs. YP
| Feature | Revenue Protection (RP) | RP with Harvest Price Exclusion | Yield Protection (YP) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Covers yield loss | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Covers price decline | Yes | No | No |
| Price used for indemnity | Higher of projected or harvest price | Projected price only | Projected price only |
| Revenue guarantee set using | Projected price × APH × coverage level | Projected price × APH × coverage level | Projected price × APH × coverage level |
| Indemnity if yield falls AND price drops | Calculated using higher price — larger payout | Calculated using projected price — same as YP | Calculated using projected price — smaller payout |
| Premium cost | Highest | Medium | Lowest |
| % of farmers choosing (corn/soybeans) | ~65% | ~10–15% | ~20–25% |
| Best for | Most situations — especially volatile price environments | Stable-price crops with yield risk | When prices are unlikely to decline; budget-conscious |
How Revenue Protection Indemnity Is Calculated
Understanding the RP indemnity formula is the key to understanding why most farmers choose it. Here's a worked example for a corn producer:
RP Indemnity Example — Corn, 500 acres
How Yield Protection Indemnity Works
Using the same scenario with YP, the calculation works differently:
YP Indemnity Example — Same Farm, Same Year
Premium Cost Comparison
RP costs more than YP because it provides more coverage. The exact difference varies by crop, county, and coverage level, but for a representative 500-acre corn operation in central Illinois at 80% coverage:
| Policy Type | Estimated Gross Premium | USDA Subsidy (52%) | Farmer's Net Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue Protection (RP) | ~$38,000 | ~$19,760 | ~$18,240 |
| RP with HPE | ~$31,000 | ~$16,120 | ~$14,880 |
| Yield Protection (YP) | ~$25,000 | ~$13,000 | ~$12,000 |
Illustrative estimates based on 2026 actuarial data for central Illinois corn. Actual premiums vary significantly by county, APH, and current commodity prices. Get a precise quote from your agent.
When to Choose Each Policy
Choose RP When...
- Commodity prices are volatile or uncertain
- You want full protection against both price and yield risk
- Your lender requires comprehensive coverage
- You're farming corn and soybeans in the Corn Belt
- You cannot absorb a large income shortfall in a down-price year
Choose RP-HPE When...
- You want to save some premium vs. full RP
- You price grain at planting (marketing contracts lock in price)
- Commodity prices are historically stable for your crop
- You want yield coverage without paying for full revenue protection
Choose YP When...
- Minimizing premium cost is a priority
- You're growing a crop where prices rarely decline at harvest
- You have forward contracts covering most of your expected production
- Local crop insurance agent recommends it for your specific crop/county
Talk to a Crop Insurance Agent About RP vs. YP
The right policy type depends on your specific crop, county, APH, and marketing strategy. A USDA-approved agent can run actual premium quotes for both options and help you decide.
Find an Agent at RMA →AcreCompass does not sell crop insurance and earns no commission on policy purchases.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
- USDA Risk Management Agency — Policy Types and Coverage
- USDA RMA — Summary of Business by Program, 2024 Crop Year
- USDA RMA — Revenue Protection Policy Provisions
- University of Illinois Extension — Crop Insurance: RP vs. YP, 2025