New Counties in Illinois Eligible for PACE

November 10, 2022
Pace post application coverage endorsement ( pace ) crop insurance policy

 What is PACE?

The Post-Application Coverage Endorsement (PACE) Crop Insurance Policy has been expanded for the 2023 crop season for non-irrigated corn in select counties in Illinois. PACE is designed for corn producers who are looking to strategically apply nitrogen. It will provide supplemental coverage when a producer plans on split-applying nitrogen but is prevented due to field conditions caused by adverse weather. It gives farmers the opportunity to use split-apply to increase efficiency, decrease nitrogen runoff, and maximize their financial investment.

What counties in Illinois are eligible?

 

 

State

 

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

Illinois

County


Adams

Alexander

Bond

Boone

Brown

Bureau

Calhoun

Carroll

Cass

Champaign

Christian

Clark

Clay

Clinton

Coles

Cook

Crawford

Cumberland

DeKalb

De Witt

Douglas

DuPage

Edgar

Edwards

Effingham

Fayette

Ford

Franklin

Fulton

Gallatin

Greene

Grundy

Hamilton

Hancock

Hardin

Henderson

Henry

Iroquois

Jackson

Jasper

Jefferson

Jersey

Jo Daviess

Johnson

Kane

Kankakee

Kendall

Knox

Lake

LaSalle

Lawrence

Lee

Livingston

Logan

McDonough

McHenry

McLean

Macon

Macoupin

Madison

Marion

Marshall

Mason

Massac

Menard

Mercer

Monroe

Montgomery

Morgan

Moultrie

Ogle

Peoria

Perry

Piatt

Pike

Pope

Pulaski

Putnam

Randolph

Richland

Rock Island

St. Clair

Saline

Sangamon

Schuyler

Scott

Shelby

Stark

Stephenson

Tazewell

Union

Vermilion

Wabash

Warren

Washington

Wayne

White

Whiteside

Will

Williamson

Winnebago

Woodford

PACE

Status


Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Current

Current

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Current

Current

Current

Current

Expansion

Current

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Current

Expansion

Current

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Current

Current

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Expansion

Expansion

Current

Current

Rodney, Kenneth and Jim
By Lindsay Mitchell October 31, 2025
Celebrating Illinois Ag Leaders
Girl painting a leaf with brush at a table with paints, leaves, and other art supplies.
By Emily Graham October 30, 2025
Farm kids grow up surrounded by creativity—whether it’s building forts from hay bales, sketching tractors, or turning feed sacks into costumes.
By Tara Desmond October 30, 2025
When northern Illinois farmer Dan Sanderson started farming in the 1980s, cover crops weren’t exactly mainstream. Government set-aside programs required planting something like oats, but what stuck with Dan wasn’t the paperwork. It was the difference he noticed in those acres the next year—healthier plants and stronger soils. Decades later, that observation led him down a lifelong road of conservation and soil health improvement. In this episode of IL Corn TV, Dan joins IL Corn board member Shane Gray to talk about his path toward regenerative farming, what he learned at a 2017 Soil Health Academy that changed everything, and why he now treats soil as a living system, not something to manipulate. Dan’s story is one every farmer can relate to—trial and error, lessons learned the hard way, and realizing that “good soil” is about more than yield. 🎥 Watch Part 1 now and catch Part 2 soon, where Dan dives deeper into how he’s reducing inputs, improving soil function, and still keeping his yields strong.
college student
By Tara Desmond October 30, 2025
IL Corn's Scholarship Period Now Open
House Ag Chair Sonya Harper, Director of Ag Jerry Costello, Collin Watters, Justin Moore, Shane Gray
By Lyndi Allen October 30, 2025
House Hearing and New Executive Order Spotlight Economic Pressures on Farmers and Call for Stronger Market Opportunities
A crane loads grain onto a ship at a port at sunset.
By Lyndi Allen October 30, 2025
Corn exports continue to increase at record high volumes, but the value is at a stark low. Burdensome global supplies of corn have weighed on markets.
Show More