FSA / USDA Overview

Understanding the Farm Service Agency

The FSA is your primary point of contact within USDA for farm loans, disaster assistance, and conservation programs. This guide walks you through how it’s structured, who it serves, and how to qualify.

Farm Service Agency

Background & History

What Is the Farm Service Agency?

The Farm Service Agency (FSA) is a USDA agency established to support American farmers, ranchers, and agricultural partners through equitable and effective delivery of farm programs. Created in 1994 by consolidating several predecessor agencies, FSA administers credit, conservation, commodity, and disaster programs designed to keep farming operations viable — especially for beginning, small-scale, and non-traditional producers.

Farmers.gov is the official USDA online portal for FSA services — a one-stop destination to access loan information, track payments, submit applications, and manage your farm records digitally. Creating an account is the first step toward accessing any FSA program.

Key Concept

Lender of Last Resort

FSA serves as the “lender of last resort” — providing loans to farmers who cannot obtain financing through commercial lenders. FSA does not compete with private banks; it fills the gap for creditworthy borrowers who have been turned down elsewhere.

Learn more →

Structure

Organizational Structure

FSA operates across three levels, each with a specific role in delivering programs to farmers.

Federal Level

Sets national policy, program rules, and funding priorities. The USDA Secretary and FSA Administrator oversee national implementation of all programs and allocate resources to state offices.

Regional / State Level

State FSA offices coordinate with county offices, provide guidance on state-specific program implementation, and manage state-level funding allocations and oversight.

Local / County Level

Your local FSA county office is where you register your farm, apply for loans, and access programs directly. County Committees (COC) made up of elected local farmers guide local program priorities.

USDA Organization Chart — click to view full PDF


USDA Organization Chart

Quick Reference

Key USDA Agencies & Their Roles

USDA includes multiple agencies — each with a distinct mission. Here’s a quick guide to the ones most relevant to farmers and urban producers.

FSA — Farm Service Agency

Administers farm loans, disaster assistance, commodity support programs, and conservation reserve programs. Your primary contact for funding.

fsa.usda.gov →

NRCS — Natural Resources Conservation Service

Provides technical and financial assistance for soil health, water quality, and conservation practices on working lands.

nrcs.usda.gov →

RD — Rural Development

Offers grants and loans for rural businesses, housing, and community facilities — including value-added agriculture and food hub projects.

rd.usda.gov →

AMS — Agricultural Marketing Service

Supports domestic and international marketing of U.S. agricultural products; manages organic certification cost-share and farmers market programs.

ams.usda.gov →

OUAIP — Office of Urban Agriculture & Innovative Production

Coordinates USDA urban agriculture initiatives, community gardens, and programs specifically designed for urban, indoor, and emerging producers.

usda.gov/urban-agriculture →

SARE — Sustainable Agriculture Research & Education

Funds research and education in sustainable agriculture; urban agriculture grants program supports urban and community food system projects nationwide.

sare.org/urban-agriculture →

Quick Reference

Key Acronyms

Common FSA and USDA acronyms you’ll encounter across programs and documents.

FSAFarm Service Agency
USDAU.S. Department of Agriculture
NRCSNatural Resources Conservation Service
COCCounty Committee — local farmer-elected body guiding FSA programs
CEDCounty Executive Director — manages your local FSA office
OUAIPOffice of Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production
SARESustainable Agriculture Research & Education
NAPNoninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program
CRPConservation Reserve Program
AMSAgricultural Marketing Service
RDRural Development (USDA agency)
ELAPEmergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees & Farm-Raised Fish

RESOURCES

Explore More Tools & Resources

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Decode FSA Acronyms

Quick guide to commonly used FSA and USDA terms.

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Quick Agency Guide

Commonly referred-to agencies explained clearly.

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Additional Resources

Real results with FSA programs from real producers.

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OUAIP

Office of Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production Homepage