Now more than ever, people want to know where their food comes from and where those farms are. National conversations often center on “Big Ag” and corporate takeover of the food sector, but the latest USDA Census of Agriculture shows a more nuanced reality on the ground: most American farms are still run by families. Nearly 95% of U.S. farms are family-owned, and a large majority are small operations with modest annual revenue. Across the U.S., family farms anchor local economies, preserve working lands and sustain community food systems – and in many states, capture the biggest share of sales.


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With this in mind, researchers at Farm Flavor analyzed the latest USDA data to understand how many U.S. farms are family-owned, how much they produce and which states rely most on family-run farms.

Key Findings

  • Family farms power American agriculture. The U.S. is home to roughly 1.8 million family farms, which collectively generate about $484 billion in agricultural output each year.
  • Family ownership dominates. 94.7% of all U.S. farms are family-owned, and these operations are responsible for more than four out of every five dollars (80.7%) in total farm sales nationwide.
  • Small but numerous. Of the 1.8 million farms, about 1.6 million are small family operations earning less than $350,000 annually. The average family-owned farm generates about $269,000 in agricultural sales each year.
  • Family reliance is universal. In every state, at least 90% of farms are family-owned, with states such as West Virginia (97.6%), Tennessee (97.5%) and Kentucky (96.8%) leading the nation.

Arizona Findings

  • Family farms in Arizona: Arizona is home to 15,705 family-owned farms, which collectively generate $4,549,260,125 of the nation’s nearly $600B in total agricultural output each year.
  • Family ownership dominates: 94.0% of all Arizona farms are family-owned—ranking Arizona 29th in the U.S. in family-owned farm share. These operations are responsible for 79.1% of total farm sales in Arizona.
  • Small but numerous: Of the 1.8 million family farms in the U.S., about 1.6 million are small family operations earning less than $350,000 annually. The average family-owned farm generates about $269,000 in agricultural sales each year. In Arizona, the average family-owned farm generates $289,670 in agricultural sales each year.

U.S. Family Farms & Sales by Type

Farm Flavor analysis of USDA data
Farm Flavor analysis of USDA data

Family farms are the foundation of American agriculture. According to USDA, a family farm is one in which the majority of the business is owned by the principal operator and individuals related to them. Encompassing everything from small, sole proprietorships to large corporate-structured operations driving industry consolidation, family operations make up 94.7% of all U.S. farms and are responsible for 80.7% of total agricultural output – a striking reminder that America’s food system remains overwhelmingly family-run.

Together, small and midsize farms – those with less than $1 million in annual gross income – account for 90.8% of farms and nearly one-third (30.2%) of total agricultural output. These farms are vital to rural economies, providing local employment and sustaining communities across every region of the country.

At the same time, large family farms – those earning $1 million or more annually – represent a much smaller share of total farms but contribute over half (50.6%) of the nation’s agricultural output. These larger family operations reflect the increasing efficiency and scale of modern production agriculture, especially in commodity crop and livestock sectors.

Farms not owned by the principal operator and his or her family make up only about 5% of all farms and contribute 19.1% of agricultural output. Altogether, these figures underscore that American agriculture remains overwhelmingly a family-run enterprise – from small, diversified farms to large, multi-generational operations.

States That Rely Most on Family-Owned Farms

Farm Flavor analysis of USDA data
Farm Flavor analysis of USDA data

Family ownership is the overwhelming norm in American agriculture, but the extent to which states rely on family-run farms – and the share of agricultural output they produce – differs significantly across the country. The share of farms that are family-owned ranges from about 90% to 98%, while the share of total agricultural output generated by those farms varies much more widely, from roughly 47% in some states to more than 93% in others.

Broadly, family farm ownership is highest in the Appalachian, Southern and Midwest regions, where agriculture tends to remain local, generational and community-driven. States such as West Virginia (97.6%), Tennessee (97.5%) and Kentucky (96.8%) lead the nation in family-farm ownership, and their output shares closely mirror these figures – 93.3%, 89.0% and 88.1%, respectively. In much of the Southeast and Midwest, the same pattern holds.

Still, there are some notable outliers where the connection between family ownership and sales is weaker. Texas and Oklahoma, for example, each have around 96% of farms classified as family-owned, yet only 70.2% and 73.5% of farm sales come from those operations. Similarly, Maine shows a significant gap, with 95.4% of farms family-owned but just 71.6% of sales attributed to them. Alaska and Hawaii stand out as the only two states where family farms account for less than 50% of total agricultural output.

Kentucky’s Family Farms Fuel Local Economies

Nearly 95% of U.S. farms are family‑owned – and states such as Kentucky lead the way. Explore how Kentucky agriculture continues to thrive through family‑run farms, producing billions in output and sustaining communities across the Bluegrass State.

These discrepancies suggest that while family ownership is nearly universal, non-family operations are disproportionately more productive in certain regions due to either scale or specialization in high-value commodities. Below is a comprehensive breakdown of family-owned farm data for all 50 states, including the number of farms and total sales by farm type.

Results: States With the Most Family-Owned Farms

  1. West Virginia
  2. Tennessee
  3. Kentucky
  4. Alabama
  5. Oklahoma

29. Arizona