Week of March 23, 2026 · 1,928 price records · 69 regions
THE 30-SECOND VERSION
Spring is the most important time to know what hay is worth — and right now the Midwest is sending mixed signals. Rock Valley IA is holding firm at **$129/ton** for good alfalfa. Pipestone MN is $20 cheaper at **$109/ton**. Indiana markets are running **$225–229/ton** — nearly double the Midwest average — signaling tight horse hay supply up there. And for the first time, we're including reader-reported prices straight from the field. Iowa farmers shared real sale prices this week: dairy squares in Dyersville went for **$250–270/ton**. That's a number you won't find in any USDA report.
🌽 MIDWEST AUCTION PRICES
What hay actually sold for at auction this week:
Pipestone, MN
Rock Valley, IA
HPL Auction, IA
Dakota, SD
📊 ALFALFA GOOD — LARGE ROUND BENCHMARK
The most comparable data point across markets. Use this to know if your region is cheap or expensive right now.
| Region | Avg $/Ton |
|---|---|
| Madison County, IL | $36 |
| Iowa (statewide) | $55 |
| Arthur, IL | $59 |
| Oklahoma - Northwest | $60 |
| Nebraska - East | $80 |
| Nebraska - Central | $82 |
| Nebraska - Platte Valley | $85 |
| Kansas | $87 |
| HPL Auction, IA | $102 |
| Pipestone, MN | $109 |
| Dakota, SD | $118 |
| Rock Valley, IA | $129 |
| Kansas - Southwest | $142 |
| Montana | $150 |
| Missouri | $162 |
| Oklahoma - Northeast | $183 |
| Shipshewana, IN | $227 |
| Topeka, IN | $229 |
Indiana at $227–229/ton stands out. That's not a typo — horse hay demand in northern Indiana is pulling prices nearly double what Rock Valley commands for the same quality. If you're a seller near Indiana, you're leaving money on the table selling locally.
🌾 FROM THE FIELD — Reader-Reported Prices
These came in from farmers commenting on our Reddit post this week. This is the stuff that doesn't show up in USDA reports.
The Dyersville number is the one to watch. $250–270/ton for dairy-quality squares in east Iowa while Rock Valley good alfalfa is $129/ton in northwest Iowa. Same state. Same week. $120+/ton difference depending on where you are and what quality you're moving.
Have prices to share? Reply to this email or drop them in the comments on our Reddit post — we'll include them next week.
🗺️ NATIONAL SNAPSHOT — Where Hay Is Most Expensive
| Region | Type | Quality | $/Ton |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wolgemuth, PA | Alfalfa/Grass Mix | Supreme | $457 |
| Wolgemuth, PA | Grass | Premium | $430 |
| Wolgemuth, PA | Orchard Grass | Premium | $410 |
| Shipshewana, IN | Alfalfa | Good | $229 |
| Topeka, IN | Alfalfa | Good | $227 |
Pennsylvania continues to be its own universe. $457/ton for supreme alfalfa/grass mix — nearly 4x what the Midwest pays. Eastern seaboard horse country drives those prices and they don't come down.
💡 THIS WEEK'S INSIGHT
The geography gap is widening.
Rock Valley IA at $129/ton. Madison County IL at $36/ton. Indiana at $229/ton. These aren't different markets in different years — this is the same week, same country, same commodity.
The practical takeaway: if you're buying hay, your location determines your price more than any other factor. A buyer in Indiana paying $229/ton is 90 miles from someone paying $129/ton at Rock Valley. That $100/ton gap on a 100-ton order is $10,000.
And Missouri at $162/ton is worth watching. It sits between the Midwest ($129) and the East ($400+) and when Missouri moves, Iowa and SD tend to follow within 2–3 weeks.
P.S. — Quick question: are you buying hay, selling it, or just tracking prices? Hit reply and tell me — one line is fine. It helps me make this more useful for you.
Know someone who buys or sells hay?
Forward this — it's free and takes 2 seconds to subscribe at haywireag.com
HayWire — USDA auction data, made readable. 1,928 records from 69 regions this week.
[Unsubscribe]