U.S. Department of Agriculture Takes Next Step to Modernize AFIDA Filing Requirements and Strengthen Enforcement

July 2, 2026

On June 25, 2026, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) published a proposed rule (the Proposed Rule) that would significantly expand the scope and enforcement of the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act of 1978 (AFIDA), which requires foreign persons who acquire, transfer, or hold interests in U.S. agricultural land to report those transactions and holdings to USDA.

The Proposed Rule would broaden what qualifies as “agricultural land,” lower the ownership thresholds that trigger reporting, impose a new tiered penalty structure with heightened consequences for foreign adversaries, and transfer oversight of the program to USDA’s Office of Homeland Security (OHS), reflecting a broader shift in the U.S. government’s treatment of AFIDA as a national security tool rather than a purely agricultural data-collection exercise. The Proposed Rule follows a December 2025 Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and is informed by recommendations from a 2024 Government Accountability Office review, congressional directives in recent appropriations legislation, including a requirement that USDA share AFIDA data with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) to support reviews of transactions that may raise national security concerns, and principles articulated in USDA’s 2025 National Farm Security Action Plan.

Continue reading on the Cleary Foreign Investment and International Trade Watch blog.