$84,799 in USDA farm subsidies to county recipients (2024)
Underserved Score: 58/100
$84,799 in USDA farm subsidies to Multnomah County recipients (2024).
Sum of payments to 4 recipients in this county, EWG Farm Subsidy Database (totalfarm), 2024 single year.
Selected program components shown individually. These are separate EWG/USDA pulls and are not additive to the headline subsidy total — no combined "total" is shown. Source: EWG Farm Subsidy Database / USDA, 2024.
$136,959 in federal crop-insurance premium subsidy (RMA, 2024).
This is a separate program total (premium-subsidy dollars only) — it is not part of the subsidy headline above and is shown on its own. Source: USDA RMA via EWG, 2024.
| # | Recipient | 2024 Total |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Johnson, Mark Dba Nature's Best - Oregon Honey LLC | $83,184 |
| 2 | F.O.Z.F. | $750 |
| 3 | Freeroot Ventures Inc, Dba B-line Urban Delivery | $750 |
| 4 | Winters Farms | $115 |
Top recipients by EWG totalfarm (2024). These named payments sum toward the headline total above.
Source: EWG Farm Subsidy Database.
Land tells the story in Multnomah County: farmland is valued near $27,472 an acre (USDA NASS, 2022 Census), among the higher-value cropland in the country. Add to that, farms here are small on average — about 41 acres apiece across roughly 680 operations (USDA NASS, 2022 Census).
Multnomah County has roughly 680 farms working about 27,983 acres of land in farms (USDA NASS, 2022 Census of Agriculture), averaging ~41 acres per farm.
In Multnomah County, irrigated cropland rents for roughly $265/acre and farmland is valued near $27,472/acre (USDA NASS).
Multnomah County is predominantly vegetables country — a specialty county. Its leading harvested crops are vegetables (~17% of harvested cropland), hay (~15% of harvested cropland), and wheat (~6% of harvested cropland) (USDA NASS, 2022 Census of Agriculture).
Cattle run at roughly 5 head per 100 farmland acres (about 833 head of beef cows in inventory) here (USDA NASS, 2022 Census).
Among the nearby Oregon counties listed below, Multnomah County's Underserved Score (58/100) is higher (less USDA support per acre) than the local average (~50/100), ranking above 4 of 6 of them (higher = historically less USDA $/acre than peers).
Local signals from public data: Receives below-OR-average USDA $/acre.; Elevated beginning-producer presence (74 per 100 farms).
Your local USDA service center is where farms in Multnomah County apply for FSA and NRCS programs and get free, in-person help — they handle program sign-ups, conservation plans, and loan applications.
Source: USDA Service Center locator (Farmers.gov). Office details can change — confirm current hours and appointments via farmers.gov/service-center-locator.
The Underserved Score (0–100) is a descriptive, relative measure of how little USDA farm-program support this county has historically received per acre compared with other counties — built from up to three public-data components (USDA support per acre, producer-priority composition, and crop-insurance coverage). Lower USDA $/acre often reflects pasture, specialty, or non-commodity land use, not unclaimed funding. This is not a measure of need, deservedness, or eligibility, and it does not predict that any farm will receive funding. Sources: USDA NASS, RMA, ERS, and EWG subsidy records.
These are USDA programs commonly relevant to counties like this one, based on public county patterns. They are not a determination that you qualify — you may be eligible; check with your local FSA or NRCS office.
Counties receiving below-average USDA dollars per acre are often under-enrolled in conservation programs open to most land. You may be eligible — these are worth asking your NRCS or FSA office about.
This county has a high share of beginning producers per 100 farms. These USDA programs give beginning producers priority scoring, set-asides, or higher cost-share — if that's you, they're worth a look.
This county shows lower-than-typical crop-insurance participation. These risk-protection programs are commonly relevant — coverage and eligibility depend on your operation.
If you grow covered program crops, these commodity-support programs may apply. Eligibility depends on your crops and base acres — check with your FSA office.
Historically, Multnomah County received about $3.03 per acre of farmland in USDA subsidies. That is near the state average for USDA $/acre. That ranks #1,982 of 3,032 U.S. counties for USDA dollars per farmland acre.
2024 USDA subsidy $ (EWG totalfarm) ÷ land-in-farms acres (27,983 acres, USDA NASS 2022 Census).
A descriptive county-wide statistic — not a prediction of what any individual farm received or will receive. This is the same axis as the Underserved Score above (less $/acre → higher Underserved Score, currently 58).
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Multnomah County recipients received about $84,799 in USDA farm subsidies in 2024, per the EWG Farm Subsidy Database (totalfarm). This is a single-year county total of recorded payments, not a forecast of future funding.
In Multnomah County — where vegetables leads the harvested cropland — farmers may be eligible for conservation (CRP, EQIP), commodity support (ARC/PLC), disaster assistance, federal crop insurance, and FSA loans. Eligibility depends on your farm; use the free Subsidy Finder to see programs you could qualify for, then confirm with your local FSA or NRCS office.
The Underserved Score (0–100; 58 for Multnomah County — Moderately Underserved) is a descriptive, relative measure of how little USDA farm-program support this county has historically received per acre compared with other counties, built from three public-data components — USDA support per acre, producer-priority composition, and crop-insurance coverage (USDA NASS, RMA, ERS, and EWG records). Lower USDA support per acre often reflects pasture, specialty, or non-commodity land use rather than unclaimed funding. It is not a measure of need or eligibility and does not predict that any farm will receive funding.
Compare USDA subsidy data and Underserved Scores for nearby Oregon counties.
Farms in Multnomah County may qualify for USDA programs based on crop, conservation, and disaster activity. Run the free Subsidy Finder to see which programs you could qualify for, then prep your local USDA office visit.
Data as of June 08, 2026. Subsidy figures: USDA/EWG 2024 release. Farmland acres: USDA NASS 2022 Census. Underserved Score refreshed monthly. Each figure above carries its own data year; this page is never fresher than its oldest input.