Every time you turn the key on a modern tractor, combine, or sprayer, your equipment is collecting data—yield maps, application rates, fuel usage, even your exact location [citation:2]. But here’s the million-dollar question: Who actually owns that data? In 2026, with AI and machine learning hungry for farm data, understanding your rights isn’t optional—it’s essential to protecting your operation.

The short answer: It depends on your contract

Unlike European Union farmers who have data rights under the EU Data Act [citation:7], U.S. farmers currently have no federal law guaranteeing farm data ownership [citation:2][citation:6]. Instead, your rights are determined by the terms-of-service agreements you click “accept” on—often without reading [citation:6].

⚖️ 2026 update: Colorado has introduced HB26-1270, which would establish that farmers retain ownership of raw agricultural data and must receive fair compensation if it’s sold [citation:1]. Nebraska is considering similar legislation (LB525) [citation:4][citation:9]. These bills signal a major shift—but aren’t law yet.

What data is your equipment collecting?

Modern ag equipment collects far more than you might realize. The Ag Data Transparent model agreement, the industry standard for transparency, defines several categories [citation:3][citation:8][citation:10]:

Agronomic Data

Crop types, planting dates, harvest yields, application rates

Land Data

Soil types, field boundaries, topography, drainage

Machine Data

Fuel use, engine hours, maintenance records, location (added 2025) [citation:8][citation:10]

Sustainability Data

Carbon sequestration, conservation practices, emissions (NEW 2026) [citation:5][citation:8]

Three types of data—three ownership rules

Understanding ownership requires knowing the difference between data types. The updated Ag Data Transparent framework (November 2025) makes these distinctions clear [citation:3][citation:8][citation:10]:

🌾 Raw Agricultural Data
Unprocessed information from your equipment—yield monitor readings, as-applied maps, soil sensor data. Should be owned by you, the farmer [citation:1][citation:3].

📊 Derived Data
New insights created by combining your data with other farms’ data, analyzed through algorithms. Typically owned by the company [citation:8][citation:10]. Example: A company uses 1,000 farms’ yield data to create a planting recommendation model.

📱 Usage Data
How you interact with the platform—which features you use, time of day, device type. Owned by the company [citation:8][citation:10].

What companies can do with your data

Under most current contracts, by using connected equipment you grant the manufacturer a license to use your data. The updated model agreement clarifies these uses [citation:8][citation:10]:

  • Create derived data (e.g., crop models, predictive algorithms)
  • Combine with other farms’ data for aggregated insights
  • Train artificial intelligence models—but cannot disclose your specific data outside the company

What they CAN’T do without your consent: sublicense your raw data to third parties [citation:8][citation:10]. But enforcement is limited—as one expert puts it, “There is no data police out there” [citation:2].

Real-world concerns: Why this matters

The Nebraska Farm Bureau warns that data could be used against farmers in ways many haven’t considered [citation:4]:

  • Landlords accessing yield data to justify rent increases
  • Commodity traders using early harvest data to short markets [citation:2]
  • Competing farmers using data to bid on your rented ground [citation:4]
  • Targeted sales based on your operation’s specific needs [citation:2]

Your data rights checklist

Before signing any connected equipment agreement, ask these 5 questions:

Who owns the raw data? Does the contract explicitly state you own it? [citation:3]
Can you delete your data? Look for “right to delete” within 30 days of termination [citation:8][citation:10]
Where is data stored? Updated agreements require storage in USA/Canada [citation:8][citation:10]
Is your data used for AI training? If so, is it anonymized? [citation:5][citation:8]
Can you opt out of data sharing? Without losing equipment functionality? [citation:2]

New in 2026: Sustainability data explosion

With carbon markets and regenerative agriculture incentives growing, “Sustainability Data” is now explicitly defined in updated contracts [citation:5][citation:8]. This includes conservation practices, emissions data, and carbon sequestration metrics. This data has real financial value—Colorado’s proposed bill even includes a 3% excise tax on data transactions to fund young farmers [citation:1].

What farmers can do right now

Until federal law catches up, here’s how to protect yourself:

  • Read the contract. Yes, it’s long—but look for “data,” “ownership,” “license” [citation:2].
  • Look for Ag Data Transparent certification. Companies with this seal voluntarily disclose data practices [citation:2][citation:3].
  • Build relationships. As Wisconsin farmer Ben Craker notes: “Having that relationship with the local dealer… I trust that guy” [citation:2].
  • Ask before you sign. Use our checklist above.

Need help understanding a data contract?

AgriTruckSupply believes in transparency. We don’t collect or sell your farm data—ever. Our team can help you review equipment agreements and point you to resources.

Ask our team

Free farmer-to-farmer advice • No pressure • Just honest help

Bottom line: Your data is valuable

As Todd Janzen, administrator of Ag Data Transparent, puts it: “The increase in use of AI tools makes defining and addressing data ownership a necessity” [citation:8][citation:10]. You wouldn’t let someone take your grain without payment—don’t let them take your data without understanding the terms.

At AgriTruckSupply, we’re farmers too. We believe your data belongs to you. That’s why we’ve never sold customer data, and we never will. When you need parts or advice, you’re talking to people who respect your operation—and your privacy.