Trump Administration Debuts OnlyFarms.gov to Showcase Wins for American Agriculture
The Trump administration launched OnlyFarms.gov, a new website that highlights the administration's agricultural accomplishments and how American farmers have been helped. The name is a deliberate play on the adult website OnlyFans, and whatever you think of the branding, the substance behind it is worth a closer look.
According to Breitbrat, the site features a searchable map where users can click on their state to see the average amount they've saved due to Trump's farming agenda. It's a simple, transparent tool that does something Washington rarely bothers to do: show taxpayers exactly where the money went and who benefited.
What the Numbers Actually Say
According to the website, the administration has delivered over $40 billion in direct assistance to farmers and ranchers across the country. That includes $12 billion in economic assistance through the Farmer Bridge Assistance (FBA) program.
Those aren't trivial figures. For an industry that operates on razor-thin margins and contends with weather, supply chain disruptions, and volatile commodity prices, $40 billion in direct assistance represents a federal government that actually prioritized the people who feed the country.
The site also highlights provisions from the One Big, Beautiful Bill. Among them:
- The virtual elimination of the death tax was made permanent, benefiting more than 2 million family farms.
- Increased Section 179 small business expensing limits, allowing farmers to immediately write off new equipment and land improvements, freeing up capital for growth.
The death tax provision alone addresses one of the most persistent grievances in rural America. Family farms aren't stock portfolios. They're land, equipment, and generational knowledge passed from parent to child. Forcing heirs to liquidate acreage to satisfy the IRS was never a good policy. Making its elimination permanent removes a sword that has hung over farm families for decades.
Friday's New Measures
On Friday, President Trump announced steps meant to ease some of the burdens on the agricultural industry. Among them was an SBA loan program that will increase guarantees to 90% for lenders who work with small businesses in the agricultural industry.
That's a meaningful shift. Lenders extending credit to small agricultural operations carry real risk. Raising the federal guarantee to 90% doesn't eliminate that risk, but it dramatically lowers the barrier for farmers who need capital to plant, expand, or modernize. Credit access is oxygen for small operations, and this program opens the valve wider.
The Politics of Feeding a Nation
There's a reason this kind of initiative rarely generates the breathless cable news coverage that a Washington scandal does. Agriculture doesn't fit neatly into the narratives that drive media cycles. It's not glamorous. It doesn't happen in Brooklyn or Silver Lake. It happens in places the political class flies over.
But the calculus is straightforward. American food security depends on American farmers remaining viable. Every family farm that folds doesn't just eliminate a business. It eliminates institutional knowledge, regional economic stability, and a link in the supply chain that doesn't reassemble easily. The consolidation of American agriculture into fewer and larger corporate operations is a trend that should concern anyone who thinks about resilience, competition, or the kind of communities that sustain a republic.
What the OnlyFarms site represents, beyond the cheeky name, is a willingness to document results and put them in front of voters in a format they can actually use. Click your state. See the number. Decide for yourself whether the policies worked. That's a level of directness that most administrations avoid, because most administrations would rather talk about intentions than outcomes.
The Branding Question
Will the name raise eyebrows? Obviously. That's the point. A website called "Agricultural Accomplishments Dashboard" would collect digital dust. OnlyFarms.gov will get shared, talked about, and clicked on by people who would never seek out a government agriculture portal. It's marketing, and it works precisely because it's unexpected.
The substance is what matters. Over $40 billion delivered. Two million family farms shielded from the death tax. Section 179 was expanded so farmers can invest without waiting years to recoup the write-off. An SBA loan program redesigned to get capital into the hands of the people who grow the food.
Washington loves to talk about supporting the backbone of America. This administration built a website that shows the receipts.

