Premium Inputs
Example Data Table
| Crop | Risk | Acres | APH | Price | Coverage | Grand Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corn | Medium | 120 | 155 | $5.50 | 75% | $5,060.18 |
| Wheat | Low | 300 | 62 | $7.10 | 70% | $5,420.44 |
| Soybeans | High | 85 | 48 | $13.25 | 80% | $4,175.62 |
Formula Used
- Liability = Acres × (APH × Trend) × Price
- Coverage Amount = Liability × Coverage Level
- Gross Premium = Coverage Amount × Base Rate × Combined Factors
- Endorsements = Liability × Endorsement Rate (added)
- Subsidy = (Gross Total) × Subsidy Share
- Total Due = Net Premium + Service Fee + Tax + Admin Fee
- Grand Total = Total Due + Finance Charge (if applicable)
- Coverage factor: (Coverage ÷ 0.50)1.70
- Unit factor: Basic 1.00, Optional 1.08, Enterprise 0.92
- Soil, planting window, peril focus, irrigation method factors
- Practice, organic, beginner discount, diversification, scale
- Protection factor: yield vs revenue with volatility
- Loss history, county factor, deductible adjustment, catastrophic
How to Use This Calculator
- Select currency and optionally note your location fields.
- Pick crop, risk zone, soil type, and planting window.
- Enter acres, APH yield, trend factor, and elected price.
- Choose coverage level, protection type, units, and practice.
- Adjust volatility, loss history, diversification, and discounts.
- Add endorsements, supplemental bands, and optional add-ons.
- Enter subsidy, fees, and payment plan settings.
- Click Calculate Premium to see results above.
Professional Article
Premium Drivers You Can Control
Premium estimates start with liability: acres × trend adjusted APH yield × elected price. Any change to acres, yield, or price scales coverage dollars directly. Coverage level then increases cost nonlinearly, because higher protection usually triggers more frequent payouts. Unit structure, deductible choice, and organic status apply multipliers that help compare operational strategies.
Risk, Location, and Agronomy Inputs
Risk zone is a simplified proxy for local experience. County factor lets you nudge results when you know local conditions. Soil type, planting window, irrigation practice, and irrigation method adjust exposure to drought stress, flood loss, and stand failure. Diversification can reduce volatility, so a small discount can approximate spread risk across fields. Peril focus weighting highlights which hazard dominates your region.
Protection Type and Market Volatility
Yield protection responds to production shortfalls only. Revenue protection also reacts to price movement, so the calculator uses a volatility input to scale the premium factor. This lets you test calmer markets versus sharp swings. When paired with a realistic loss history factor, the estimate becomes more sensitive to operations with repeated claims. Trend adjustment helps reflect gradual yield improvements.
Endorsements and Supplemental Bands
Endorsements add premium as a share of liability, making them easy to benchmark. Options include hail, wind, frost, storage, quality, extra expense, prevented planting, and replant planning inputs. Supplemental bands can be modeled using SCO and ECO selections, adding cost for coverage above the base level and showing the incremental price of extra protection. Use overrides when you have confirmed rates.
Subsidy, Fees, and Decision Use
After gross premium, subsidy share reduces producer cost. Service fee, tax, and admin fee then build a complete total due. Payment plans can add a finance charge for installments, revealing cash flow impact. Scenario rows recompute totals across coverage levels, supporting side by side comparison. Exported CSV and PDF outputs preserve assumptions for records, budgeting, and agent discussions. Charts summarize key amounts at a glance, and support clearer renewal and coverage conversations.
FAQs
1) What does “liability” mean in this estimate?
Liability is the value basis for coverage. It is calculated from acres, trend-adjusted APH yield, and elected price. Coverage amount is liability multiplied by your selected coverage level.
2) How does revenue protection change the premium?
Revenue protection includes price risk in addition to yield risk. The volatility input scales the revenue factor, so higher expected price swings increase the estimated premium compared with yield-only protection.
3) Are subsidy values guaranteed?
No. The subsidy schedule here is illustrative for planning. If you know your program’s subsidy share, enter it as an override to align the estimate with your specific policy structure.
4) Why do unit structure and deductible settings matter?
Unit structure changes how risk is pooled, which can affect premium rates. Deductible adjustment shifts the cost-protection balance: higher deductibles usually lower premium, while lower deductibles usually increase it.
5) What do SCO and ECO represent here?
They are modeled as supplemental coverage bands above your base coverage level. The calculator adds an incremental premium estimate for each selection to show how extra protection can change total cost.
6) Can I use the exports for quotes or applications?
Use exports for documentation and comparison, not as an official quote. Programs and insurers use approved rate filings and eligibility rules. Share the report with an agent to validate assumptions and refine inputs.