Idaho agriculture is a way of life and a serious business — and it carries risks that ordinary insurance simply isn’t built for. A working farm or ranch has barns and outbuildings, expensive equipment, livestock, employees, and liability exposures that a standard homeowners policy specifically excludes. Protecting an agricultural operation takes coverage designed for it.
This guide explains the main pieces of farm and agribusiness insurance for Idaho operations and how they fit together.
Why Farm Operations Need Specialized Coverage
The single biggest mistake we see is assuming a home or general business policy covers farm activities. It usually doesn’t. The moment your property is a working operation — selling crops, raising livestock for sale, running equipment — you need farm or agribusiness insurance built around those exposures.
Farm Property and Outbuildings
This covers the physical structures of your operation beyond the home: barns, sheds, silos, fences, and stored hay or feed, against perils like fire, wind, and theft. Eastern Idaho’s weather extremes make this coverage especially worth getting right.

Equipment and Machinery
Tractors, combines, irrigation systems, and implements represent a huge investment. Equipment coverage protects against damage, theft, and breakdown, and can be written to reflect either replacement cost or actual value — an important choice we’ll walk through with you.
Livestock Coverage
For ranchers and livestock producers, animals are inventory. Livestock coverage can protect against losses from accidents, certain diseases, and disasters. Coverage terms vary by animal type and operation, so it’s tailored to what you raise.
Farm Liability
Agriculture carries real liability exposure — an injury to a visitor, livestock that gets loose, products you sell. Farm liability protects you against these claims and the legal costs that follow. It’s the safety net that keeps one incident from threatening the whole operation.
Farm Vehicles and Labor
Trucks and vehicles used in the operation typically need commercial or farm auto coverage. And if you employ farm labor, Idaho’s agricultural employment rules often require workers’ compensation — the specifics have nuances, so it’s worth confirming. We coordinate all of this alongside your broader business insurance.

Bundling Into a Farmowners Policy
Many Idaho operations combine these coverages into a single farmowners policy that can also include the farm dwelling — simpler to manage and often more cost-effective than separate policies. We build the package around your specific operation, whether that’s row crops, cattle, dairy, or a diversified family farm.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does homeowners insurance cover a working farm?
No. A standard homeowners policy excludes most farm and business activities. A working operation needs farm or agribusiness coverage to protect outbuildings, equipment, livestock, and farm liability.
What does farm insurance typically cover?
Farm policies generally combine property coverage for barns and outbuildings, protection for equipment and machinery, livestock coverage, and farm liability. Many are bundled into a farmowners policy, with options added for your specific operation.
Do I need workers’ compensation for farm labor in Idaho?
Agricultural employment has specific rules in Idaho, and many farm operations are required to carry workers’ compensation for employees. Because exceptions are nuanced, confirm your situation with an agent to stay compliant.
Is crop insurance the same as farm insurance?
No. Crop insurance specifically protects against crop loss and is often handled through federal programs, while farm or agribusiness insurance covers your property, equipment, livestock, and liability. Many operations need both.
Call (208) 529-1522 or visit eaglecapinsurance.com/contact and we’ll build farm and agribusiness coverage tailored to your Idaho operation — property, equipment, livestock, and liability — at no cost to review.
About the author — Kyle Bennett, Principal & Licensed Insurance Agent, Eagle Cap Insurance, Ammon, ID. Kyle is a licensed independent insurance agent and the principal of Eagle Cap Insurance, helping Idaho farms and agribusinesses protect what they’ve built, serving eastern Idaho from Idaho Falls (Ammon) and Preston.





