California almond acreage drops again in 2023
California’s total almond acreage dropped again in 2023, this time by about 74,000 acres, making this two years in a row a decrease occurred.
Total acreage dropped from just under 1.64 million acres last year to about 1.56 million in 2023, even though bearing acres — orchards producing almonds and planted in 2020 or earlier — increased slightly to 1.37 million acres compared with 1.34 million acres at this time last year.

Photo courtesy of Almond Board of California.
But the amount of non-bearing acreage — new orchards planted in 2021, 2022 or 2023 — sank about 105,000 acres from 294,000 acres in 2022 to 189,000 acres in 2023, according to the Land IQ 2023 Standing Acreage Final Estimate.
Orchard removals increased again in 2023 to about 83,000 acres as of Aug. 31, compared with 60,400 acres removed in 2022 and continuing a trend of an increasing pace of removals that started in 2021, according to the accompanying Land IQ 2023 Removal Update. That contributes to the analysis pointing to fewer acres next year and possibly beyond, Waycott said.
In addition, nearly 41,000 acres are classified as either stressed or abandoned. They were included in the standing acreage total because the orchards “may have the ability to recover,” Land IQ said.
The estimates come from multiple lines of evidence, including agronomic and remote sensing knowledge, robust on-the-ground verification, customized image analysis, artificial intelligence and more. Land IQ said the 2023 standing acreage estimate is 98.8 percent accurate.
For more information on Almond Board of California, visit almonds.com.