Oregon's Number of Farms and Total Agriculture Production Increases 2012 to 2017, Declines Nationally

Oregon’s Value of Agricultural Production Increases, Decreases Nationally

  • The value of farm production increased 2.5% to $5 billion from 2012 to 2017, while total agricultural production decline -1.6% nationally.
  • Oregon farms contributed 1.3% of the total value of US agricultural production in 2017

Total Number of Farms Increases in Oregon, Declines Nationally

Oregon’s total number of farm operations increased by 2,177 between the 2012 and 2017 Census of Agriculture (see Figure 1). This represents an increase of 6.1 percent, while nationally the number of farms decreased by 67,083, or 3.2 percent. The number of farm operations has declined in both Oregon (-5.9 percent) and the nation (-7.8 percent) in the past 20 years. Oregon has consistently contained about 1.8 percent of all US farms over this period.

Acres of Land in Farms Declines Faster in Oregon than Nationally

  • Total land in farms has been declining since 1997 (US and Oregon)
  • In the last 20 years, the amount of acres in Oregon farms has declined 9.6 percent; nationally the number of acres in farms has decreased by 5.7 percent
  • Oregon has 339,256 fewer acres in farms than it did 5 years ago (-2.1%); the number of total acres declined by -1.6% in the US (see Table 1)
  • This loss of land has occurred while the total value of agricultural production has increased.

Total Production and Total Farms Increase while Land in Farms Decreases from 2012 to 2017

Table 1. Acres of Land in Farms
Year US Oregon
1997 954,752,502 17,658,213
2002 938,279,056 17,080,422
2007 922,095,840 16,399,647
2012 914,527,657 16,301,578
2017 900,217,576 15,962,322

Percentage change in last 20 years (1997-2017)

-5.7 -9.6
Percentage change in last 10 years (2012-2017) -2.4 -2.7
Percentage change in last 5 years (2012-2017) -1.6 -2.1
Acres lost in last 5 years (2012-2017) -14,310,081 -339,256

This analysis focuses on 2017 Census of Agriculture data. Unless labeled, all comparisons of change over time refer to change from 2012 to 2017. See more topics at: Oregon Agriculture by the Numbers - 2017 Census of Agriculture Data

Was this page helpful?

Related Content from OSU Extension

Have a question? Ask Extension!

Ask Extension is a way for you to get answers from the Oregon State University Extension Service. We have experts in family and health, community development, food and agriculture, coastal issues, forestry, programs for young people, and gardening.