U.S. Tobacco Groups Urge Targeted Relief Amid Export Downturn

Fourteen U.S. agricultural and tobacco-sector organizations sent joint letters to President Donald Trump, Secretary Brooke Rollins, and Secretary Scott Bessent thanking the Administration for expressing willingness to support flue-cured tobacco farmers facing severe trade disruptions. The letters highlighted urgent challenges, including a 20–25% drop in exports, 15–20% decline in farm-gate prices, and shrinking demand from key markets like China. Rising input costs are also adding financial pressure as growers plan for 2026.

“On May 29th, China wrote to the U.S. leaf merchants that it would not honor its purchase as much as 60 million pounds of flue-cured leaf in 2025. This exit resulted in adverse impacts on prices and values as the season progressed. The surplus created a soft demand that caused a market downturn of 27 cents per pound on average.”

While the Administration recently announced the $12 billion Farm Bridge Assistance Program, tobacco is currently excluded. The coalition urged targeted relief, citing precedent from the first Trump Administration when tobacco was included in market facilitation programs. The groups emphasized the risk of lost family farms and the need for prompt inclusion of tobacco in relief measures.

Tobacco Associates disseminated the letters to industry members and encouraged growers to contact local, state, and federal representatives to share personal experiences and the real impact of the downturn, stressing that these voices carry significant weight in shaping policy responses.