The United States is set to record its smallest wheat planting area since official records began more than a century ago, following a sharp downward revision by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
According to the USDA’s latest Acreage report, total wheat planted area for the 2026 season is estimated at 42.74 million acres, a decline of about 2.4 per cent from the March planting intentions and six per cent lower than the 45.33 million acres planted in 2025. The figure is also significantly below market expectations and marks the lowest planted wheat area since record-keeping began in 1919.
The largest reduction came from winter wheat, with planted area revised to 31.52 million acres. This represents a 2.7 per cent decline from the March estimate and nearly five per cent below last year’s level. Hard red winter wheat, the country’s largest wheat class, accounted for most of the decline, while soft red winter wheat acreage also fell.
The unexpected reduction in acreage provided support for wheat futures, which had been under pressure despite tightening supply fundamentals. The USDA report prompted renewed buying in grain markets as traders reassessed the outlook for US wheat production.
Analysts noted that the acreage figures suggest tighter domestic supplies in the coming marketing year, although global production prospects will continue to influence prices. Market observers said the report was one of the most bullish developments for wheat in recent weeks after futures had slipped to multi-month lows.
The USDA’s latest assessment is expected to remain a key reference point for grain markets as attention shifts to crop development, weather conditions and harvest prospects across major wheat-producing states.
Source: WorldGrain

