
Photo credit: Wyffels Hybrids.
Wyffels Hybrids has announced the introduction of 16 new corn products, each selected through the company’s rigorous, multi-year testing program and proven to perform under the most extreme conditions—including the unprecedented heat, persistent disease pressures, and regional drought that defined the 2025 growing season.
These new hybrids build on Wyffels’ legacy of delivering farmer focused innovation by combining advanced genetics, strong agronomic packages, and the consistency growers expect.
Proven Performance Through the Harshest Conditions
The 2025 crop year challenged even the toughest hybrids. Extreme heat, record rainfall, elevated disease pressure, and drought conditions created environments that strained genetic potential across the Central Corn Belt. Wyffels’ research program—deeply rooted in real world, field level testing provided unmatched clarity and confidence.
“These 16 products didn’t just pass our evaluation—they excelled,” said Dr. Shane Meis, Director of Research at Wyffels. “Because our testing is intensely local and relentlessly focused, we know how these hybrids respond when conditions get tough. And 2025 gave us the ultimate proving ground.”
Innovation Driven by Independence
Wyffels Hybrids remains independently owned, giving the company the freedom to make decisions based solely on what growers need. This independence empowers the Wyffels team to prioritize performance, diversity, and a strong local fit across every product released.
Each new product in this lineup is backed by:
Multi-year, multi-location testing across diverse soils and stress environments
Hands-on agronomic evaluations to ensure hybrids don’t just yield—they provide standability, disease tolerance, and strong performance under stress
Trait and genetic packages selected specifically to meet the evolving challenges of Central Corn Belt growers
Local fit and flexibility, enabled by Wyffels focus and close relationships with customers.
With the curveballs the environment threw this year, the research team dug deeper than ever—analyzing performance across regions with high Southern Rust pressure, heavy tar spot pressure, late season drought conditions and everything in between.
“This team has more in-field, eyes-on observations than anyone else, which gives us a lot of trust in the hybrids they select,” shared Product and Agronomy Manager Mitch Heisler.
Wyffels has stated that the company looks forward to the positive impact they will have on customers when launching these 16 new hybrids.
