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Linn County, Oregon

Farm Programs & Local Resources

Last Updated: March 2026 | Always verify with your local USDA office. Report an error

Linn County occupies the east side of the central Willamette Valley, centered on Albany and Lebanon. Flat, fertile valley floor stretches from the Willamette River to the Cascade foothills.

Linn County is the grass seed capital of the world — more grass seed is produced here than anywhere else on earth. Mint, small grains, and livestock complement the seed industry on the valley floor, while cattle ranching extends into the foothills.


Quick Facts

RegionWillamette Valley
Top CommoditiesFruit & tree nuts, Poultry, Berries, Cattle & calves, Vegetables, Dairy
Farms & Ranches~2,100 (2022 USDA Census)
Agricultural Land~340,000 acres
Average Farm Size~157 acres

Find Your Local USDA Offices

Your nearest USDA Service Center houses both NRCS (conservation programs like EQIP and CSP) and FSA (loans, disaster assistance, farm numbers) under one roof. Most Oregon counties are served by a Service Center that may cover multiple counties.

Find your Service Center:

→ USDA Service Center Locator

Search for "Linn County" to find your local NRCS and FSA offices, including address, phone number, and hours.

What to do when you call: Ask to schedule a meeting with a conservation planner (for EQIP/CSP) or a loan officer (for FSA programs). Mention the type of operation you run and what improvements you're considering. They'll tell you what to bring to the meeting.


Programs for Linn County Operations

Based on the agricultural profile of Linn County, these programs are most likely to be relevant:

Soil health practices on intensively cropped seed land are a strong CSP fit. Riparian buffers along valley waterways, cover cropping, and nutrient management are relevant EQIP practices. The seed crop rotation makes this ideal CSP territory.

Not sure which programs fit? Run our free eligibility screener — it takes 2 minutes and generates a personalized action packet you can print and bring to your USDA office.


Local Conservation Priorities

Every county has specific conservation priorities set by the Local Working Group (LWG) — a committee of local ranchers, farmers, NRCS staff, and conservation partners. EQIP applications that address local priorities score higher in the ranking process.

We don't have Linn County's specific LWG priorities yet.

Ask your local NRCS office: "What are the priority resource concerns in Linn County?" This directly affects how your EQIP application is scored. You can also attend the annual LWG meeting — they're open to all producers.


Your Next Steps in Linn County

  1. Run the eligibility screener to see which programs fit your operation: Free Screener
  2. Find your local USDA Service Center and call to schedule a meeting: Service Center Locator
  3. Read the full Oregon guide for statewide program details, deadlines, and office contacts: Oregon Farm Programs Guide

This guide is part of Farmer's Navigator. Built by Oregon ranchers. Free for everyone.