Water Resources and Irrigation Practices in Illinois Agriculture
Illinois sits atop one of the most water-rich agricultural landscapes in North America — the Illinois River alone drains roughly 29,000 square miles — yet water management remains one of the more consequential decisions a grain farmer in the state can face. This page covers how water resources are allocated and used in Illinois agriculture, how irrigation systems function across different farm types, and where the practical decision points lie between irrigating, draining, or relying on rainfall alone.
Definition and scope
Illinois agriculture draws on three overlapping water systems: surface water (rivers, streams, and farm ponds), groundwater (principally shallow glacial aquifers), and precipitation, which averages between 35 and 48 inches annually depending on location, according to the Illinois State Water Survey. The state's naturally high rainfall places most of its 76,000+ farms in the rainfed category — meaning irrigation is supplemental rather than foundational, unlike in the arid Great Plains or the irrigated valleys of California.
That distinction matters enormously for how water law and practice are structured. Illinois operates under the reasonable use doctrine for groundwater, meaning landowners may use groundwater underlying their property as long as that use is not wasteful or injurious to neighboring users — a standard detailed by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. Surface water rights follow a similar reasonableness standard, not the strict prior-appropriation system used in western states. A full treatment of the legal framework appears on the Illinois Agricultural Water Rights page.
Scope and coverage: This page addresses water use practices within Illinois state boundaries and under Illinois state law. Federal programs such as USDA NRCS conservation cost-shares and Clean Water Act permitting requirements interact with these practices but are governed by federal authority and are not fully covered here. Agricultural drainage — a closely related but distinct subject — is addressed separately on the Illinois Agricultural Drainage page.
How it works
Most Illinois row-crop acres receive no supplemental irrigation at all. The Illinois Farm Bureau and University of Illinois Extension estimate that fewer than 5% of Illinois cropland acres are irrigated — a figure that stands in sharp contrast to Nebraska, where roughly 45% of cropland relies on irrigation (USDA 2017 Census of Agriculture).
Where irrigation does occur, three system types dominate:
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Center-pivot systems — The most capital-intensive option, suited to large contiguous fields. A single center-pivot covering 130 acres can cost $60,000 to $100,000 installed, according to University of Illinois Extension. These systems draw primarily from groundwater wells and apply water uniformly through overhead sprinklers.
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Drip and subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) — Used almost exclusively in specialty crop and vegetable production. SDI delivers water directly to the root zone, reducing evapotranspiration losses significantly compared to overhead application. The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) provides cost-share assistance for SDI through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP).
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Flood and furrow irrigation — Older and less efficient, still found on some river-bottom operations in western and central Illinois where surface water is accessible from the Illinois River and its tributaries. Water application uniformity is lower than with pivot or drip systems.
Efficiency matters beyond cost. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Illinois EPA) monitors water withdrawals above a threshold of 100,000 gallons per day, which requires registration under the Illinois Groundwater Protection Act. Operations below that threshold are generally unregulated at the withdrawal level, though water quality obligations still apply.
Common scenarios
Illinois irrigation most often appears in three specific contexts rather than across the general corn-soybean landscape:
Vegetable and specialty crop production. Illinois ranks among the top 10 states in sweet corn and pumpkin production. These crops are far more sensitive to moisture stress than field corn, and the Illinois specialty crops sector depends heavily on reliable supplemental water in dry summers.
Drought-year supplemental application. During drought years — 2012 being the most severe in recent memory, when Illinois experienced its driest summer since the 1930s according to NOAA records — even conventionally rainfed farms weigh the economics of emergency irrigation. The calculation typically involves comparing expected yield loss against the cost per inch of applied water.
Seed production contracts. Foundation seed corn operations face tighter quality tolerances than commodity grain, making yield consistency more valuable. Irrigation helps maintain pollination-period moisture when dry spells coincide with silking — a narrow 7-to-10 day window where moisture stress most damages yield potential.
Decision boundaries
The decision to irrigate in Illinois hinges on four intersecting factors, not a single threshold:
- Crop type and value. A $4.50/bushel commodity corn field tolerates a different risk profile than a specialty vegetable crop selling at farmers markets or under a direct contract.
- Soil water-holding capacity. Illinois soils range from high-clay Drummer silty clay loams (which hold more than 9 inches of plant-available water per foot of depth) to sandier outwash soils along river valleys that can hold as little as 1 inch per foot. The Illinois Soil Health and Conservation page covers soil classification in more depth.
- System economics. At a typical pumping cost of $3 to $6 per acre-inch depending on energy source, a full irrigation season across 100 acres represents $18,000 to $36,000 in operating cost alone — before amortizing capital.
- Water availability and regulatory obligations. Farms operating near the 100,000-gallon-per-day registration threshold should verify their withdrawal records annually with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
The Illinois climate and farming patterns shape these decisions as much as any equipment or economics, and the intersection of climate variability with water infrastructure planning is increasingly visible in how the /index resource landscape for Illinois agriculture is organized.
References
- Illinois State Water Survey — Illinois Climate and Hydrology
- Illinois Department of Natural Resources — Water Resources
- Illinois Environmental Protection Agency — Groundwater Protection
- USDA 2017 Census of Agriculture
- USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service — EQIP Program
- University of Illinois Extension — Water Management
- NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information — Drought Data