Blake Hurst has had a lot to worry about lately. A third-generation soybean, corn and flower farmer in northwestern Missouri, he is currently planting crops.
But commodity prices have been low, droughts have turned his fields to dust and now, he said, new tariffs threaten to disrupt his family business.
Since stepping into office, President Donald Trump鈥檚 on-again, off-again tariff policies have hit farmers and producers from multiple sides. Equipment and material costs have gone up and farmers are now unsure who will buy their crops and if they鈥檒l make a profit.

Blake Hurst and his family operate Hurst Greenery in Westboro, Missouri. The third-generation crop and flower farmer in the northwest corner of the state says the lack of specifics about President Trump's tariffs makes it difficult to plan for his 1,400-acre farm.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 emphasize enough how this uncertainty is extraordinarily expensive for anybody trying to make decisions for business,鈥 Hurst said of Trump鈥檚 trade policies. 鈥淓very day, people put their money down on what they think is going to happen.鈥
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Currently, the U.S. has levies on steel and aluminum products, auto parts, products from Canada, Mexico and China and a baseline 10% universal duty on all imported goods 鈥 with more possible. The goal, Trump has said, is to increase domestic jobs and production.
Trump has gone back and forth on retaliatory tariff increases with China 鈥 a major buyer of American soybeans and a big seller of farm equipment. Most recently, he imposed a 145% tariff on Chinese goods, to which China responded by placing a 125% levy on American goods.
Hurst said he now can鈥檛 afford to replace old tractors or combines, buy his usual potash fertilizer from Canada or order his annual shipping container of planters from China.

Blake Hurst and his family operate Hurst Greenery in Westboro, Missouri. The third-generation crop and flower farmer in the northwest corner of the state says the lack of specifics about President Trump's tariffs makes it difficult to plan for his 1,400-acre farm.
鈥淚 have no idea how I鈥檓 going to source those. I can鈥檛 afford to pay 145% tariffs,鈥 Hurst said. 鈥淚 wish I could buy my pots next door, but I can鈥檛. I鈥檝e got one place to get them, and that place is no longer successful, so I don鈥檛 know what we鈥檙e going to do.鈥
The lack of specifics about tariffs make it difficult to plan for his 1,400-acre farm, about two hours north of Kansas City in the town of Westboro, Hurst said. Even though commodity prices could look different or a new trade deal could be in place by harvest time, farmers need answers as they plant now, he said.
And more changes could happen in the coming days. U.S. and China are expected to hold trade talks Saturday through Monday in Switzerland.
In the red
Rural communities rallied behind Trump as he sought a second term by promising and monetary aid to smaller scale and family farms. According to from Investigate Midwest, farming-dependent counties across the country overwhelmingly voted for Trump in 2024 by about 78%. In Missouri, Trump won all but four of the state鈥檚 115 counties.
Trump has touted tariffs as a way to onshore manufacturing and production, protect American workers and stop migrants and illegal drugs from entering the U.S. In a March 3 social media post, Trump addressed 鈥渢he great farmers of the United States.鈥
鈥淕et ready to start making a lot of agricultural product to be sold INSIDE of the United States,鈥 he wrote.
Missouri is the ninth-largest agricultural exporting state in the U.S., shipping $6.1 billion in domestic agricultural exports to places like Mexico, Canada and countries in Asia in 2022, according to the Office of the .
It鈥檚 been a few lean decades when it comes to farming profits, said Tim Gibbons, former communications director for the Missouri Rural Crisis Center, a non-profit advocacy group in Columbia.
Between 2017 and 2022, Missouri lost 7,433 farms and 10,000 cattle operations due to high operating costs and low market prices, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Interest rates jumped following the COVID-19 pandemic, when the Federal Reserve began a series of hikes that moved rates from 0.33% in early 2022 to 5.33% in July 2023.
This month, soybean prices sit at $10.40 per bushel, which is almost two dollars less than it was this time last year. Wheat prices also dropped by about $2 and corn is about 40 cents less per bushel compared to last May.
Soybeans are a paramount player for Missouri. It鈥檚 a versatile crop: It can feed livestock, produce seed oil and be turned into fuel. About $2.3 billion worth of soybeans were exported in 2022. Most of it goes to China, the world鈥檚 largest importer of the legume, which received over 105 million tons of soybeans last year.
Tariffs and trade policy affect multiple business sectors, but the agricultural industry doesn鈥檛 have the ability to quickly switch up its strategies like other businesses might, said Mike Steenhoek, executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition. So, he鈥檚 recommending farmers diversify where they sell, rather than try to plant different crops.
鈥淚f China is a home-run market, which it is, a success in the future for us will involve more and more finding the base-hit markets that means some of the other smaller markets around the world,鈥 Steenhoek said. 鈥淏ut you can win baseball games via base hits.鈥
Hurst, the farmer, said that about a quarter of his entire crop yield gets sent to China, so he doesn鈥檛 know what he鈥檒l do if China doesn鈥檛 accept the goods. He said he鈥檒l probably have to ship to South America, another major soybean producer.
鈥淪ome of Brazil鈥檚 customers will now be our customers, and China will buy from Brazil,鈥 Hurst said. 鈥滳learly, it鈥檚 more inefficient and will cost more, and that鈥檚 going to come out of my pocket.鈥
In early April, Missouri U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley said that Trump would look out for American farmers amid tariff increases. In his first term, Trump unveiled $16 billion in aid for farmers who had been hurt under the U.S. trade war with China.
鈥淭he President has said that he will absolutely compensate farmers if our farmers get targeted by, say, China or other competitors who try to take out retaliation on our farmers,鈥 Hawley told Fox 2 in an interview. 鈥淭he Trump administration has been clear: They鈥檙e going to protect American farmers, and that begins with Missouri farmers, and I intend to hold the President to his word on that.鈥
Hawley鈥檚 office did not immediately respond for a request for comment.

Cows are seen on Darvin Bentlage's farm in Lawrence County, in southwestern Missouri. Bentlage recently penned an op-ed on how Missouri farmers can鈥檛 withstand another round of Trump tariffs because many are still feeling the affects of the tariffs imposed under Trump's first term.
Darvin Bentlage, a fourth-generation cattle and grain farmer in Lawrence County, recently penned an op-ed on how Missouri farmers can鈥檛 withstand another round of Trump tariffs, because many are still feeling the effects of the tariffs imposed under Trump鈥檚 first term.
Bentlage runs a 120-acre farm with 40 beef cattle. He used to operate 1,200 acres, half planted with row crops like soybeans, wheat and corn and the other half as pasture and hay fields for cows. He recently downsized.
In 2018, U.S. soybean exports to China dropped by 75% amid trade tensions, according to the U.S. International Trade Commission. And producers say the U.S. still has yet to win back some of those markets.
Bentlage remembers how high prices got under the tariffs of Trump鈥檚 first term. A part he needed for a mower machine jumped from $9,500 to $12,000.
鈥淟uckily, I had a lot of equity in my farm and so I just went about paying for it again,鈥 Bentlage said. He and his wife retired from the 鈥渂ig farm鈥 about a year and a half ago to avoid 鈥済oing through it again.鈥
Though farmers won鈥檛 see the result of Trump鈥檚 levies on grain prices until harvest time in the fall, Bentlage said he鈥檚 concerned about operating costs now and what uncertainty about tariffs means for the future of American farmers.
鈥淲e鈥檙e becoming an untrustworthy and unreliable trade partner and we鈥檝e got too much competition, especially in agriculture out there,鈥 Bentlage said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not real positive, especially for newer guys starting out, so it鈥檒l be difficult.鈥
Tess Bauer, a senior and Orchard Farm High FFA president, is among a handful of students in St. Charles County still living on family farms.