Estimated financial losses faced by UK farmers due dry weather impacts on key arable crops

Analysis that estimates the potential financial losses faced by UK farmers growing wheat, barley, oats and oilseed rape as a result of the record breaking hot and dry spring and summer in 2025.

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This year has seen the hottest spring and summer on record in the UK, and the driest spring in England for over 100 years. This has had a significant impact on the development of key arable crops across the UK, with the dry spring in particular hitting yields.

This analysis uses published per hectare yield figures for England and combines them with crop area estimates for the UK produced by the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB) to estimate the total crop production for wheat, spring and winter barley, oats and oilseed rape. It then uses current ex-farm prices to calculate how much farmers would generate in revenue this year if the whole crop was sold at those prices. 

We differentiate between milling and feed prices for wheat and oats and malting and feed prices for barley based on Defra figures on end use for each of these crops.  Using these harvest estimates and prices, we estimate that farmers are set to lose approximately £828m in revenue when selling at current ex-farm prices, compared to if production volumes had been at the 10-year average (between 2015-2024), as reported by Total Income from Farming (TIFF) data. This is 20% less.