Agri-business administrations surge in first half of 2026

More agricultural businesses are entering administration as a challenging economic climate adds to the financial pressures facing the sector.

According to an assessment by law firm Shakespeare Martineau, a total of 11 agricultural companies entered administration during the first six months of the year, the highest number since 2010.

High input and staffing costs, coupled with volatile prices and inflationary pressures, have continued to weigh on businesses’ bottom lines.

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Georgina Euden, agriculture legal director at Shakespeare Martineau, said: “Farmers and landowners are contending with a perfect storm.

“Rising input costs, volatile commodity prices, changes to subsidy support and increasing regulatory burdens around environmental land management have all added pressure over a number of years, and we’re now seeing some businesses reach breaking point.

“When an agricultural business fails, the impact extends far beyond the farm gate.

“It affects families, employees, local suppliers and the wider rural economy, as well as the long-term stewardship of the countryside.”

The Gazette Official Public Record shows that more than 1,150 companies entered administration in the first six months of 2026 in total across the UK, an almost 50% increase on year-earlier levels.

Andy Taylor, partner and head of restructuring at Shakespeare Martineau, said: “For the first time since the pandemic, business failures have not only risen sharply but have surpassed pre-Covid levels – highlighting just how difficult the current trading environment has become.

“The sheer scale of the increase suggests many businesses have simply run out of options.”

The firm is advising businesses experiencing cashflow difficulties not to wait until it’s too late to seek support.

Ms Euden added: “Early intervention gives far more options, whether that’s restructuring, diversification, renegotiating agreements or planning for succession.

“Once a business reaches crisis point, many of those opportunities disappear.”