Rising input costs, elevated interest rates, and tighter farm margins have increased the importance of liquidity within the U.S. Federal Crop Insurance Program (FCIP). A distinctive feature of FCIP is the delayed billing of premiums, which aligns payment obligations with post-harvest revenues and eases short-term cash-flow constraints. In addition to this built-in deferral, the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation has repeatedly authorized interest waivers on unpaid premiums during years of widespread disaster. Since 2019, these interest deferrals have become routine, covering more than $18 billion in producer premiums and providing substantial implicit subsidies. This brief examines how premium timing and repeated interest deferrals function as de facto liquidity tools in an era of rising farm costs. Using administrative payment data from 2012–2023, we document a marked shift in premium payments toward the interest-free deferral window following consecutive deferral announcements. While these policies provide critical short-term relief and support continued participation in crop insurance, they also shift costs to the Treasury and may increase program liabilities by encouraging higher coverage levels. The findings highlight growing trade-offs between liquidity support, fiscal exposure, and the long-term actuarial integrity of the FCIP.