Coweta County, Georgia
Farm Programs & Local Resources
Last Updated: March 2026 | Always verify with your local USDA office. Report an error
Rolling Piedmont hills with fertile valleys, crossed by the Chattahoochee River along the western border. Suburban development from the Atlanta metro area increasingly fragments agricultural landscapes.
Traditional farming continues on larger tracts with cattle, hay, and some row crops, while smaller operations focus on horses and agritourism. Development pressure has converted many farms to residential use.
Quick Facts
| Region | West Central Georgia |
| Top Commodities | Floriculture, Cattle & calves, Horses, Fruit & tree nuts, Vegetables, Berries |
| Farms & Ranches | ~420 (approx.) |
| Agricultural Land | ~53,000 acres |
| Average Farm Size | ~164 acres |
Find Your Local USDA Offices
Your nearest USDA Service Center houses both NRCS and FSA under one roof.
Find your Service Center:
Search for "Coweta County" to find your local NRCS and FSA offices.
What to do when you call: Ask for a conservation planner (EQIP/CSP) or loan officer (FSA). Mention your operation type and planned improvements.
Programs for Coweta County Operations
Based on Coweta County's agricultural profile, these programs are most relevant:
Programs help farmers adapt to development pressure through conservation easements and value-added enterprises. EQIP supports water quality protection along the Chattahoochee River corridor and Lake boundaries.
Not sure which programs fit? Run our free eligibility screener — 2 minutes, personalized action packet.
Local Conservation Priorities
EQIP applications addressing local priorities score higher in ranking.
We don't have Coweta County's specific LWG priorities yet.
Ask your local NRCS office: "What are the priority resource concerns in Coweta County?"
Your Next Steps in Coweta County
- Run the eligibility screener: Free Screener
- Find your USDA Service Center: Service Center Locator
- Read the Georgia guide: Georgia Farm Programs Guide
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