For years now, a persistent narrative has circulated in American political discourse: China is quietly buying up vast swaths of US farmland, threatening food security, undermining sovereignty, and gradually gaining strategic control over America’s agricultural base.
It is an emotionally resonant story, one that combines geopolitical rivalry, declining trust in institutions, and anxieties about national decline. Yet like many claims that gain traction through repetition, its empirical foundations are weak.
The short version: Chinese ownership of US farmland exists, but the scale is dramatically smaller than commonly portrayed, the economic implications are muted, and any genuinely important concerns are narrower, more specific, and less sensational than the public narrative machine alleges.
We begin with the numbers. Chinese-linked investors own somewhere between roughly 250,000 acres of US agricultural land, depending on the year and reporting method used. That may sound substantial in isolation, but context matters. The United States contains roughly 880 to 900 million acres of farmland. Chinese ownership therefore amounts to approximately 0.02 percent of total US agricultural land: a rounding error in macroeconomic terms. Even within the category of all foreign-held US farmland, China represents well under one percent. Put differently, the claim that China is “buying up American farmland” is not supported by the available data.
Indeed, the broader story of foreign ownership looks very different from the one often implied in political debates. Foreign entities collectively own approximately 43 to 46 million acres of US agricultural land, or roughly three to four percent of the national total. Yet the overwhelming majority of this ownership comes not from geopolitical adversaries, but from long-standing allies and trading partners. Canada alone owns roughly one-third of foreign-owned US farmland: 13 to 15 million acres, or forty to sixty times more than China. The Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and other European countries collectively account for millions more acres. If acreage alone constituted an economic threat, political attention would look very different.
Moreover, much of what is classified as “foreign-owned agricultural land” is not traditional cropland at all. Large portions consist of timberland, renewable energy projects, grazing areas, or institutional investment holdings. Particularly in states such as Texas, foreign-held acreage is often tied to wind or solar developments rather than farming. In many cases, land ownership reflects pension funds, long-term asset diversification, or industrial activity rather than strategic attempts to influence agricultural production. This distinction matters because public imagination tends to conjure images of foreign governments quietly accumulating Midwestern cropland, when the reality is often corporate ownership structures tied to energy, forestry, or vertically integrated agribusiness.
The Chinese component of this story is especially concentrated. More than eighty percent of Chinese-linked agricultural holdings are associated with only a handful of entities, the most notable being the 2013 acquisition of Smithfield Foods. That transaction alone brought approximately 146,000 acres under Chinese ownership. Yet even here, the political symbolism tends to outweigh the underlying economics. Smithfield remains a US-based producer, operating largely through American supply chains, workers, facilities, and domestic production. Although its ownership structure changed amid heated opposition from interest groups, the firm did not suddenly transform into an instrument of foreign agricultural control. The firm primarily produces for US consumers and functions within American regulatory and legal institutions.
Geographically, Chinese-linked holdings are concentrated in a relatively small number of states, including Texas, North Carolina, Missouri, Utah, and Florida, with smaller holdings scattered elsewhere. Even in these states, however, Chinese ownership typically represents far less than one percent of total agricultural acreage. There is little evidence that such ownership materially influences agricultural output, commodity pricing, food availability, or broader land markets. The United States remains one of the largest and most productive agricultural exporters in the world. No plausible reading of the data suggests Chinese land ownership threatens American food security in any meaningful sense.
Still, dismissing the matter entirely would be a mistake. There are concerns, but they are much narrower than fearmongers tend to imply. The first involves proximity to sensitive military or strategic sites. Several proposed or completed Chinese-linked land purchases have raised scrutiny because of their location near military installations or critical infrastructure. A frequently cited example involved land near Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota, where national security objections ultimately helped block development plans. In these cases, acreage is less important than geography. A few hundred strategically placed acres may matter more than tens of thousands of remote ones.
Second, there are reasonable questions regarding ownership transparency. Land can be acquired through subsidiaries, partnerships, shell corporations, or joint ventures that obscure beneficial ownership. This creates legitimate challenges for regulators attempting to distinguish between normal commercial investment and potentially sensitive acquisitions. Yet here too, the appropriate response is targeted transparency and review mechanisms, not broad exaggerations about foreign domination of American agriculture.
Third is the issue of reciprocity, though its significance is open to debate. The United States remains one of the world’s most desirable destinations for investment precisely because of our stable institutions, relatively open markets, and strong protections for private property. Other countries, including China, operate under far more restrictive legal and ownership systems, particularly with respect to land. Yet it is not immediately obvious that differing rules necessarily constitute a problem. A country that attracts global capital because investors trust its institutions occupies a different position than one in which investment is constrained by legal uncertainty or state control. The relevant policy question, then, is not merely whether reciprocal access exists in a formal sense, but whether particular forms of foreign investment create identifiable national-security or strategic risks that outweigh the broader benefits of openness.
If one argues that Chinese purchases of agricultural land should be prohibited categorically, the logic quickly expands to foreign direct investment as a category. Should foreign firms be barred from investing in American factories, warehouses, logistics networks, commercial real estate, or manufacturing facilities? Should allied pension funds be prohibited from owning timberland? Should energy investments be restricted simply because ownership is foreign? Such questions illustrate why precision matters. Nearly $6 trillion of cumulative foreign investment underpins swaths of the American economy. The policy issue is not foreign investment per se, but how to distinguish productive capital inflows from genuinely sensitive national security risks.
The conclusion is far from dramatic, which may explain why it struggles to compete politically. Chinese ownership of US farmland is tiny, highly concentrated, and irrelevant to both America’s agricultural production and food security. The broader narrative of sweeping foreign control is substantially overstated relative to the facts and data. National security concerns can exist in specific cases, especially near sensitive infrastructure, and reciprocity deserves thoughtful debate. But neither concern justifies abandoning proportionality or confusing a handful of narrow issues for a sweeping economic threat that does not exist.
