Poultry Pay Rules Delayed to 2027 for More Review Time
Published Date: 3/18/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The USDA is pushing back the start date for new rules about how poultry growers get paid and handle big expenses. Instead of starting July 1, 2026, these changes won’t kick in until December 31, 2027. This gives everyone more time to think things over and share their thoughts before the rules take effect.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 1 mixed.
Effective Date Delayed 18 Months
The USDA is proposing to delay the Payment Systems rule that was to take effect on July 1, 2026 and instead make it effective on December 31, 2027. This delay would push back all compliance deadlines and the start of the rule's requirements by 18 months.
Near-Term Administrative Cost Savings
Delaying the rule 18 months would save live poultry dealers (LPDs) $4,902,000 and poultry growers $249,000 in administrative costs in the first year, a combined $5,151,000. AMS estimates ten-year totals of $6,146,000 for LPDs and $374,000 for growers (combined $6,520,000) and provides NPVs discounted at 3% and 7% in the analysis.
Grower Protections Postponed
The Payment Systems rule provisions that are delayed include: prohibiting LPDs from reducing a grower's compensation based on grower ranking; creating a presumptive violation when aggregate gross annual payments based on ranking exceed a threshold; requiring a duty of fair comparison and documentation for ranking systems; and requiring disclosures when requesting growers to make capital investments. Those protections would not take effect until December 31, 2027 if the delay is finalized.
Possible Consumer Price Effects Postponed
AMS noted the final rule could increase compliance costs or reduce production efficiency and that those changes could lead to higher consumer prices; delaying the rule delays any such price effects until at least December 31, 2027. The agency also noted uncertainty about whether benefits would outweigh costs.
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