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Dairy Herd Growth Offsets Beef Cow Decline

Dairy Herd Growth Offsets Beef Cow Decline
Mar 10, 2026
By Farms.com

January 2026 report shows fewer beef cows smaller calf crop outlook

 

The January 1, 2026 cattle inventory report provides an important overview of how the U.S. cattle herd changed over the past year. While the numbers surprised some producers, the report offers a consistent estimate of cattle numbers across regions and categories. 

According to the report, total cattle and calves inventory declined slightly from the previous year. As of January 1, 2026, the United States had about 86.16 million head of cattle and calves, which is about 316,900 head fewer than the previous year. This represents a 0.4% decline in total inventory. 

Most of the decrease came from the beef cow herd. Beef cow inventory fell by about 284,800 head, or 1% , bringing the total to 27.61 million head. Some industry observers expected beef cow numbers to increase because beef cow slaughter dropped more than 17% in 2025 compared to 2024. However, the earlier year had unusually high cow slaughter levels, which helps explain the continued decline in beef cow inventory. 

In contrast, dairy cow numbers increased during the year. Dairy cow inventory rose by about 187,500 head, reaching 9.57 million cows. This is the highest dairy cow inventory recorded in the United States since 1993. Strong milk prices through most of 2025 and high values for beef-dairy cross calves supported expansion in dairy herds. 

The report also showed a smaller calf crop. In 2025, the calf crop totaled about 32.9 million head, which was 520,900 head lower than the previous year. This reduction is roughly equal to removing one full week of finished cattle slaughter from the market. 

Despite fewer calves being born, producers retained about 4.71 million heifers for beef cow replacement in 2026. This represents a small increase compared to 2025, although fewer heifers were available due to the smaller calf crop. 

Looking ahead, strong beef demand could support cattle markets for several more years. However, rebuilding the beef cow herd will depend heavily on weather conditions. In many regions, drought during the fall months has limited producers’ ability to retain replacement heifers. 

If environmental conditions improve, producers may begin expanding herds. The pace of that growth remains uncertain and may become clearer over the next few years.

Photo Credit: gettyimages-ahavelaar


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