The results of the 2025 National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) Yield Contest were announced Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. NCGA received almost 7,800 entries for their Yield Contest, representing 47 states, with 60 entries from Kentucky. 2025 marked the 61st year of the contest.
Each year, NCGA conducts its corn Yield Contest to gauge just how far farmers can push the limits of corn yield under various growing methods. These growing methods are sorted into 10 production categories, with differences in irrigation status, type of tillage, and a category for nitrogen management.
To learn more about rules and guidelines for the contest, click here.
All entries across the 10 categories averaged 269 bushels per acre this year, an 11% increase from just 10 years ago in 2015 (242 bu/acre). The highest yield for 2025 came out of the Strip-Till Irrigated category in Charles City, Virginia at 572.2589 bushels per acre (David Hula).
For the Kentucky state winners, the highest yield was 332.2976 bushels per acre out of Madison, Kentucky by Sydney Hammock. The average yield between all Kentucky state entrants was 289.92 bu/acre, which was 7.8% higher than the national average.
To view more results from past winners of the contest, click here.
“The Yield Contest is really about finding out what this crop is capable of,” Jed Bower, Ohio grower and NCGA President, said. “And as corn farmers, we get to show what we’re made of, too. It challenges participants to find innovative ways to succeed and contribute to decades of agronomic data that prove that American farmers are great at what we do.”
KY Corn is happy to congratulate the Kentucky state winners, listed in the table below. Information such as winner category, yield by bushel per acre, city, corn seed brand, and corn seed number, are listed in the results.
A complete list of the 2025 national and state Yield Contest winners can be found here.
Kentucky State Winners for NCGA 2025 Corn Yield Contest
Conventional Non-Irrigated Class
| Rank | Name | City | Hybrid Name | Number | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scott Zoglmann | Owensboro | DEKALB | DKC68-35 | 328.6213 |
| 2 | Brad Mitchell | Clay | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 321.1938 |
| 3 | Joe Goetz | Owensboro | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 320.2387 |
No-Till Non-Irrigated Class
| Rank | Name | City | Hybrid Name | Number | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| * | Sydney Hammock | Madison | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 320.5321 |
| * | Sterling Edwards | Adams | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 314.1752 |
| 1 | Scott Goetz | Philpot | Beck’s Hybrids | 6574TCV2P | 313.2657 |
| 2 | Karl Dawson | Henderson | Dyna-Gro | D55VC80RIB | 309.9706 |
| * | Joe Goetz | Owensboro | DEKALB | DKC66-06RIB | 307.9121 |
| 3 | Jonathan Hagan | Waverly | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 307.0042 |
Strip-Till, Minimum-Till, Mulch-Till, Ridge-Till Non-Irrigated Class
| Rank | Name | City | Hybrid Name | Number | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sydney Hammock | Madison | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 332.2976 |
| * | Scott Zoglmann | Owensboro | DEKALB | DKC68-35 | 329.8808 |
| * | Sterling Edwards | Adams | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 319.7760 |
| 2 | Shae Zoglmann | Owensboro | DEKALB | DKC68-35 | 315.4260 |
| * | Joe Goetz | Owensboro | Dyna-Gro | D60TC45RIB | 308.3873 |
| * | Joe Goetz | Owensboro | AgriGold | A647-42TRCRIB | 305.8402 |
| * | Scott Goetz | Philpot | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 305.7887 |
| 3 | Clay Wells | Clay | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 301.5572 |
No-Till Irrigated Class
| Rank | Name | City | Hybrid Name | Number | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kyle Dixon | Fulton | DEKALB | DKC68-35 | 316.4549 |
| 2 | Drew Langley | Glendale | DEKALB | DKC68-35RIB | 311.1539 |
| 3 | Paul Howlett | Glendale | DEKALB | DKC68-35 | 295.5802 |
Strip-Till, Minimum-Till, Mulch-Till, Ridge-Till Irrigated Class
| Rank | Name | City | Hybrid Name | Number | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Neal Ballance | Bowling Green | DEKALB | DKC66-06RIB | 292.9753 |
| * | Neal Ballance | Bowling Green | Pioneer | P1136AM | 288.5286 |
*Same grower has the high yield across multiple classes; same grower can only win one class.

