22 C
Lahore
Tuesday, February 17, 2026

US cotton acreage set to dip in 2026 as rotations win and ELS rebounds

U.S. cotton growers plan to plant 9.0m acres in 2026, down 3.2% from 2025, according to the National Cotton Council’s early-season intentions survey. Upland accounts for 8.8m acres (-3.4%), while ELS rises 14% to 161,000 acres. Assuming “normal” abandonment and yields, the NCC pegs production at roughly 12.7m bales.

What’s driving it
The NCC frames the shift as a relative-price rotation story: cotton prices were broadly flat versus last year’s survey window, soybeans firmed a bit, and corn softened—nudging acreage away from cotton in several regions.

Where it moves

  • Mid-South is the big pullback (-20.6% to about 1.2m acres).
  • Southeast also eases (-4.9%).
  • Southwest is slightly higher (+1.6%), with Texas marginally up in upland acres.
  • Western upland declines (-7.2%).

Why this matters for textiles
A smaller U.S. crop doesn’t automatically mean tighter global cotton—stocks, Brazil/Australia output, and demand do the heavy lifting—but it raises the sensitivity of 2026 pricing to weather shocks, especially if policy-linked demand (eg, “US-origin cotton” provisions in trade deals) keeps attention on American supply.

 

Related Articles

Stay Connected

11,285FansLike
394FollowersFollow
10,000SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles