It is important to understand which types of loss your ranch insurance policy covers to make sure you have the right amount of protection. Your agent can explain which losses are covered within each property classification of your ranch insurance.
Many of our clients bundle multiple insurance policies for convenience, discounts, and broader protection. Explore these other personal insurance options.
Protect your farm or ranch with a tailored policy that combines various coverages into one convenient package. A ranch insurance policy covers your property and provides liability coverage that can be tailored to the needs of your home and ranch operations. While ranch insurance policies differ, in general you'll find four areas of protection:
Farm insurance is a specialized type of insurance designed to protect farms, ranches, and agricultural operations from a wide range of risks. A farm insurance policy can combine protection for your home, barns, outbuildings, equipment, livestock, liability, and certain farming operations into one comprehensive policy.
Because every farm is different, insurance coverage can be customized to meet the unique needs of hobby farms, family farms, livestock operations, crop farms, and larger agricultural businesses.
Farm insurance may provide coverage for your farmhouse, barns, silos, equipment sheds, fencing, machinery, tractors, combines, livestock, hay, feed, tools, and farm liability. Many policies can also be customized with optional coverages for irrigation systems, grain bins, farm vehicles, business property, and additional structures.
Your insurance agent can help tailor coverage based on the type of farming operation you own and the risks you face.
Farm insurance is appropriate for anyone involved in agricultural operations, including crop farmers, livestock producers, horse farms, hobby farms, family farms, poultry operations, orchards, vineyards, and specialty agricultural businesses. Even smaller farms may have insurance needs that are not adequately covered by a standard homeowners insurance policy.
If your property is used to generate agricultural income, specialized farm insurance should be considered.
In many cases, no. While homeowners insurance may provide protection for your home and personal belongings, it often excludes or limits coverage for farming operations, business property, farm equipment, livestock, and liability arising from agricultural activities.
A farm insurance policy is designed specifically to address the unique risks associated with owning and operating a farm.
Yes. Many farm insurance policies provide coverage for tractors, combines, balers, plows, sprayers, utility vehicles, and other farm equipment used in agricultural operations. Coverage options vary depending on whether the equipment is owned, leased, or financed.
Because farm machinery represents a significant investment, it's important to insure equipment based on its replacement value whenever possible.
Many farm insurance policies offer coverage for livestock, although the amount and type of protection depend on the policy you purchase. Additional livestock coverage may be available for cattle, horses, sheep, goats, poultry, and other farm animals against specific covered causes of loss.
Your insurance agent can help determine the most appropriate coverage based on the type of livestock you own.
Farm insurance premiums are influenced by several factors, including the size of the property, type of farming operation, number of buildings, value of equipment, livestock, annual farm income, claims history, location, and selected coverage limits.
Because every farm is unique, obtaining a customized insurance quote is the best way to determine your insurance costs.
Yes. Farm liability insurance helps protect you if you're legally responsible for bodily injury or property damage resulting from your farming operations. Liability coverage may also help pay legal defense costs if you're sued following a covered incident involving your farm.
Many farm owners choose higher liability limits or purchase a personal or commercial umbrella policy to provide additional financial protection.
Yes. Hobby farms often have different insurance needs than full-time commercial farming operations, but they still require specialized protection. Whether you raise a few animals, grow produce for local markets, or maintain small agricultural buildings, a hobby farm policy can often be customized to fit your operation.
Your insurance agent can help determine whether your property qualifies as a hobby farm or a commercial agricultural operation.
You should review your farm insurance policy at least once each year and whenever significant changes occur. Purchasing additional acreage, constructing new barns, buying equipment, increasing livestock, expanding your farming operation, or diversifying your agricultural activities may all affect your insurance needs.
An annual insurance review helps ensure your farm remains properly protected while keeping your coverage aligned with your operation's growth and changing risks.