Palantir (PLTR) landed a $300 million contract with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to build an integrated data platform that monitors America's food supply chain in real time. The deal was announced Tuesday and is one of the largest non-defense federal contracts Palantir has ever won.
It also marks the second big federal data project the company has announced this quarter, after expanding its work with the Department of Defense earlier in April.
What the Deal Covers
Palantir will provide operational software to modernize USDA service delivery to farmers and field staff. The contract supports two administration priorities: framing farm security as a national security issue and speeding up how USDA delivers services to growers.
The deal also ties into the "One Farmer, One File" initiative, which is designed to cut the paperwork burden on farmers applying for federal programs. It supports the National Farm Security Action Plan, which treats agriculture as critical infrastructure on par with power and water.
Why It Matters for Palantir
Palantir built its reputation on defense and intelligence work, which is still the core of its government business. The USDA deal shows the company can also win large non-defense federal contracts, which expands its total addressable market across the U.S. government.
The "physical AI" angle: food supply chain monitoring combines satellite data, weather, commodity prices, logistics, and farm-level inputs into one platform, which is exactly the kind of multi-source data work Palantir is built for. That story has been driving the stock higher all year.
The Market Reaction
Palantir shares moved higher on the announcement, continuing a year in which the company has been one of the strongest federal AI plays. The USDA deal also gives investors a clearer picture of the recurring revenue base outside defense.
Government contracts of this size tend to roll into multi-year extensions, which pulls more predictable revenue into the model.
The Policy Backdrop
Administration officials have spent the past year reframing food and agriculture as part of national security, citing supply chain attacks, pest outbreaks, and foreign ownership of farmland. That framing is what pulled the USDA toward the same kind of data integration tools the Pentagon has used for years.
Palantir fits neatly into that pitch because its platforms already handle classified defense workflows. Agencies with national-security-adjacent missions increasingly see that as a reason to pick Palantir over general-purpose cloud providers.
What to Watch
Geopolitical pressure on global supply chains is lifting every national-security-adjacent company. Tariffs, the Iran war, and ongoing tension with China are all making food, energy, and logistics data more valuable to governments.
Watch whether this USDA deal opens the door to similar Department of Transportation or Department of Energy contracts over the next few quarters.
