Australian farmers are facing overwhelming pressure. They shouldn’t have to face this alone.

Australian farmers are facing overwhelming pressure. They shouldn’t have to face this alone.

Rural Aid is calling on Australians to stand with farmers and their families, as many continue to recover from recent disasters while managing the rising cost of keeping their farms running.


Drought, fires, floods and cyclones have hit farming regions in quick succession, leaving many communities still recovering while preparing for what comes next. At the same time, soaring costs for essential inputs like diesel and fertiliser are making it harder to maintain day-to-day operations.


This is no longer a single difficult season. It is a period of compounding pressure, where multiple challenges are being felt at once. For many farmers, that means managing recovery, rising costs and uncertainty at the same time, with limited capacity to absorb further shocks. Without support, many farmers will continue to face increasing pressure, placing further strain on their livelihoods and the future of their farms.


Rural Aid’s latest Pulse of the Paddock data reflects this, with financial strain, climate variability and rising costs continuing to shape daily life on the land. More farmers reported a decline in their mental health over the past 12 months than those who saw improvement.


Rural Aid CEO John Warlters said farmers are facing multiple pressures at the same time, with little separation between recovery and ongoing operations.


“Farmers are dealing with disaster recovery, rising costs and ongoing uncertainty all at once,” Mr Warlters said.


“These pressures are not isolated. They are overlapping, and that is what is causing concern for our farmers’ wellbeing across many regions.”


“Rural Aid is here to help, but we can’t do it alone. Now is the time for Australians to come together to give our farmers and their families the urgent boost they need right now. A donation today will help to provide vital support such as professional counselling, financial assistance, hay, water and water tanks.”


In Victoria’s west, Natimuk farmer Michael Sudholz is among those rebuilding after fires moved through his community earlier this year.


“It happened so fast. Within half an hour everything had changed,” Mr Sudholz said.


“You don’t really understand the scale of it until you are living through the recovery. It takes a long time to work through what has been lost.”


His experience reflects a broader reality across farming communities, where recovery is ongoing and often sits alongside everyday operational pressures.


Rural Aid’s work is centred on standing alongside farming communities through hardship and uncertainty, providing support that is timely, practical and focused on long-term recovery as well as immediate need.


Mr Warlters said this urgent appeal for donations is about ensuring that the right assistance at the right time is available for our farmers and their families.


“We know farmers are strong, but they shouldn’t have to carry everything on their own,” he said. “With so many farmers in need, your support is critical to ensure we can provide the help needed to get them through.”



Make a tax-deductible donation today to help provide the support our farmers need: www.taxtime.ruralaid.org.au.

NEWS
April 28, 2026
Family owned company Australian Farm and Fencing, located in Wagga Wagga NSW, is on a mission to help more and more Australian farmers recognise what is widely considered the world's best soil restorative or premium organic fertiliser: vermicast.
April 11, 2026
Invasive woody weeds steal your pasture. Method helps you take it back.
March 23, 2026
Australian farmers choose Bioflora for real results: sustainable roots, soil‑and‑plant biology that works, and a company genuinely committed to supporting growers’ season after season. 
March 22, 2026
Adding hectares isn’t the only business growth strategy for farmers. Smarter landforming can recover margin, improve efficiency, and deliver quicker returns — whether automation is on your agenda or not. 
March 9, 2026
As sheep producers adopt electronic identification, many are focusing on systems that keep work flowing in the yards and deliver value beyond compliance. For producers, the real benefit of EID is simple: faster yard work, more reliable reads, and cleaner flock records — all without adding extra steps. 
March 9, 2026
Regional Australia Bank is helping innovative farmers unlock productivity, diversify income, and build stronger regional businesses. 
Show More