Title 7 › Chapter 35— AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ACT OF 1938 › Subchapter II— LOANS, PARITY PAYMENTS, CONSUMER SAFEGUARDS, MARKETING QUOTAS, AND MARKETING CERTIFICATES › Part B— Marketing Quotas › Subpart iii— marketing quotas—wheat › § 1335
Farms with less than fifteen acres of wheat do not have to follow federal wheat marketing quotas if their wheat acres are no more than the farm’s "small-farm base acreage," unless the operator signs a written form, when and how the Secretary requires, to be covered by the quota. The small-farm base acreage is the smaller of: the farm’s average wheat acres planted for harvest in 1959, 1960, and 1961 (or a later three-year period the Secretary picks, excluding 1963), with adjustments for bad weather, crop rotation, and similar fair factors; or fifteen acres. A farm’s official acreage allotment is the larger of: the small-farm base acreage (based on 1959–1961 and reduced by the same percentage that the national acreage allotment falls below 55,000,000 acres) or the allotment figured the usual way. If the operator does not elect to be covered, the farm: is treated for section 1340 as having the larger of the small-farm base or the farm allotment; is not subject to the land-use rules of section 1339; cannot get price support for that wheat; and will not receive wheat marketing certificates. The extra acreage used to give these small-farm allotments is added to national, State, and county allotments. The rule does not apply to crops planted for harvest in 1967 or later.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 1335
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60