Farming doesn’t come with the easiest cash flow cycle as far as businesses go.
Sure, there’s a surge of potential revenue each year, but quickly followed by months of dry spell when a farmer isn’t generating anything new — and the bills for seed, fertilizer, fuel, pesticides are coming due, many of them potentially piling up in waves.
Then there’s the surprise costs: machinery fixes they didn’t count on, an insecticide pass they really didn’t need the cost for, all before another cent of revenue flows in.
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WHY IT MATTERS: As well as being agronomy specialists, part-time mechanics, heavy-equipment operators and other roles, farmers must also be marketing whizes and financial experts to keep the cash they need to operate liquid.
Even if they manage to clear all of that while staying in the black, there’s been the risk in the last few years that they might wake up tomorrow to find that international geopolitics have wiped out their market overnight, or sent the cost of their carefully planned inputs soaring.

For many Prairie grain farmers, the toughest financial stretch of the year comes months before a single bushel is sold.
Timing the cash flow crunch

“You need to have some means of carrying or financing that cost,” said Robert Misko, a Manitoba Crop Alliance (MCA) board member for the wheat and barley crop committee.
Fertilizer, seed and land costs all come due before farmers see any return from the crop. Input costs have also risen sharply over the past decade
“You’re looking at $500, $600 an acre to seed your crop,” he said. “And most of that is basically you spend it all before you get anything off.”
A cash advance as a financial bridge
A smart grain marketing strategy can spread out the cash flow and help farmers strive for the best possible financial terms out of a year. But organizations such as the MCA though point to another tool they think farmers should consider: the cash advance.
The federal Advance Payments Program aims to bridge the gap between revenue shots though short-term financing tied to the value of a producer’s crop. It’s backed by the federal government through Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and delivered by administrators across the country, including the MCA.
Applications opened for this year’s program in early March.
“Farming is one of the most capital-intensive businesses out there,” said Darcelle Graham, MCA chief operating officer. “You’re making significant investments months before you ever see a return.”
The interest-free tug of war
The program announcement each year has led to a recurring tug-of-war over the interest-free portion of the advance. Financial pressures in several recent years had the federal government raising that bar to $250,000 and even $350,000, before bringing it back down to the standard $100,000, each time prompting a new round of industry advocacy.
In 2025, the federal government moved the line to $250,000 interest-free on most commodities, with another $250,000 for canola, which had been hit hard by Chinese tariffs. Maximum advances were set at $1 million.

The 2026 program has the government again bringing the interest-free portion back to $100,000 for most commodities, but with an extra $400,000 under that threshold for canola.
Past the interest-free portion, interest is set at prime, less 0.25 per cent.
The Canadian Canola Growers Association (CCGA), a major administrator for the program, said they’ll start distributing funds as early as April 1.
What farmers want changed
Graham said the program is designed to help farmers manage operating costs and avoid being forced to sell grain simply to meet short-term financial needs.
“What that means for you is lower costs, lower financial lower risk financing and delivered through a trusted framework,” she said.
But it’s also a program farmers would like some changes to.
Last year, industry welcomed news of a pilot program that gives a farmer’s application weight according to their past repayment history, potentially giving proven actors a faster line to the cash. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada noted that credit-worthiness pilot would let them allocate more time to farmers struggling to repay, without burdening those who had paid like clockwork.
David Gallant, vice-president of finance and APP operations with the CCGA, said at the time it was an ask they had been pushing the federal government to adopt for years.
Other proposed changes include earlier notification of post-announcement adjustments — such as those coming from the push and pull around interest-free portions — the adoption of an audit-based sale reporting system, and reducing priority agreement requirements.
More flexibility on marketing
Access to a cash advance can give producers more flexibility in deciding when to sell their grain. Many farmers want to avoid marketing crops during harvest, when prices can be weaker because of heavy supply.
“Take the cash advance that carries you through, that gives you that bridge,” Misko said. “And then when you sell your grain, well, you pay your advance back.”
Repayment is tied directly to grain sales rather than fixed monthly payments.
“The repayment aligns directly with your income, reducing pressure during tight periods,” Graham said.
Another tool in the toolbox
The advance payments program isn’t meant to replace traditional financing, Misko said, but to complement it.
“I would lean to say that it’s more on the complementary,” he said. “It’s just another one of the tools in in the process.”
Unlike some financing arrangements tied to production contracts, the program doesn’t require farmers to market grain through a specific company. The structure can also make it accessible for younger farmers who may not yet own land or equipment, as long as they own the commodity and have the right to market it, Graham said.
— With files from Jeff Melchior and Geralyn Wichers
