State Guide Updated May 2026

Farm Loans in Iowa

Iowa farmers benefit from some of the most competitive agricultural lending in the country, with Farm Credit Services of America dominating land loans and 23 FSA county offices providing government-backed options.

47.8M Acres Farmland
85,600 Farm Operations
$8,200 Avg. Acre Value
5.50% FSA Direct Rate
IA
#1Corn Producer
#1Pork Producer
#2Soybean Producer
$12.4BAnnual Ag Revenue
23FSA County Offices
$340MFSA Loans/Year
Advertiser Disclosure: AcreCompass is reader-supported. Some lender links on this page are affiliate links — we may receive compensation when you click or apply. This does not affect our editorial ratings or the order in which lenders appear. Learn more →

Iowa FSA Service Centers

Iowa has 23 USDA Farm Service Agency county offices. Call your local office to start a Direct Farm Loan application — processing times average 60 days for Direct loans and 30 days for Guaranteed loans.

Des Moines (State Office)
10500 Buena Vista Ct, Urbandale, IA 50322
(515) 254-1540
Ames Area Office
2622 Stange Rd, Ames, IA 50010
(515) 956-3540
Cedar Rapids Area
3328 Southgate Ct SW, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404
(319) 362-4160
Sioux City Area
5820 Sunnybrook Dr, Sioux City, IA 51106
(712) 255-9000
Iowa State Program
Iowa Agriculture Development Authority (IADA) — Beginning Farmer Loan
State-Backed
Max Loan
$500,000
Interest Rate
Below Market
Who Qualifies
First 10 yrs

The IADA Beginning Farmer Loan Program offers below-market rates to Iowa farmers in their first 10 years of farming. Loans can be used to purchase agricultural land, equipment, or livestock. The program is administered through participating local lenders. Apply at iowafinanceauthority.gov →

Best Farm Lenders for Iowa Farmers

Rates current as of May 2026. Lender availability confirmed for Iowa.

All Loans Land Purchase Operating Equipment Beginning Farmer

Farm Lenders — Iowa

5 lenders · Sorted by editorial rating
# Lender Loan Type Rate Range Max Loan Iowa Presence
1 Farm Credit Services of America
4.8 ★ · Best for Iowa land loans
Land, Operating, Equipment 5.85%–9.25% $50M+ ✓ Iowa Apply →
2 National Funding
4.6 ★ · Best for working capital
Operating, Equipment 7.00%–24.00% $500,000 ✓ Iowa Apply →
3 Fora Financial
4.4 ★ · Fast funding for operations
Operating, Equipment 7.00%–35.00% $1,500,000 ✓ Iowa Apply →
4 Lendio
4.3 ★ · Marketplace — compare multiple lenders
Operating, Equipment, Land Varies $5,000,000 ✓ Iowa Apply →
USDA FSA Direct Loans
Government program · No affiliate relationship with USDA
Land, Operating, Emergency 4.75%–5.50% $600,000 23 IA Offices Learn More →
Rates as of May 2026. FSA rates set by USDA quarterly. Commercial rates are representative ranges — your actual rate depends on credit, collateral, and term. AcreCompass has no affiliate relationship with USDA FSA.

Iowa Farmland Loan Market: What to Know in 2026

Iowa farmland values surged through 2022–2024 and have stabilized heading into 2026, with average per-acre values hovering around $8,200 statewide. Prime central Iowa corn ground in counties like Boone, Story, and Hamilton commands $12,000–$16,000 per acre, which significantly affects how much equity you can use as collateral — and which lenders will finance the purchase.

Farm Credit Services of America is the dominant ag lender in Iowa, holding a large share of farmland mortgages due to their competitive long-term fixed rates and deep agricultural expertise in the state. For beginning farmers, the combination of an IADA Beginning Farmer loan and an FSA Guaranteed loan can cover most of a land purchase while keeping payments manageable.

Iowa-Specific Underwriting Considerations

Iowa lenders typically underwrite farmland loans at 70–80% LTV for raw cropland and 65–75% for mixed crop/pasture. Corn Suitability Rating (CSR2) scores above 80 generally qualify for the best commercial rates. If your ground scores below 65, expect tighter LTV caps and higher rates from commercial lenders — though FSA Direct loans are more flexible on this front.

Iowa Farm Loan Application Checklist

Gather these documents before contacting lenders to speed up the underwriting process.

  • 3 years federal tax returns (Schedule F for farm income)
  • Current balance sheet (assets, liabilities, net worth)
  • Current year cash flow projection (crop insurance documentation helpful)
  • Legal description and most recent appraisal of property (if land purchase)
  • FSA farm records (farm number, crop history) — available from your county FSA office
  • Government-issued ID and Social Security number for credit pull
  • Existing loan statements (machinery notes, operating lines, land mortgages)