Summer 2026
Posted on 9/13/2025
Member-owned lender providing agricultural financing.
$19 - $27/hr
No H1B Sponsorship
Madison, WI, USA + 1 more
More locations: Rochester, MN, USA
Hybrid
Hybrid model – up to 50% work from home.
Compeer Financial is a member-owned Farm Credit cooperative that provides financial services for agriculture and rural communities in Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. It offers loans, leases, risk management, and other financing solutions tailored to farming operations and rural needs. The company operates through a cooperative model where member-owners use and guide the services, focusing on practical financing for equipment, operations, and risk mitigation rather than a traditional for-profit bank approach. What sets Compeer apart is its member-owned structure within the Farm Credit system, its regional focus on three Midwestern states, and its emphasis on empowering employees with flexible work environments and professional development. The goal is to support agriculture and rural America by delivering dependable financial products while enabling team members to thrive personally and professionally.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin
Founded
1916
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Hybrid Work Options
Flexible Work Hours
401(k) Retirement Plan
401(k) Company Match
Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
Life Insurance
Disability Insurance
Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account
Wellness Program
Paid Vacation
Paid Sick Leave
Paid Holidays
Parental Leave
Professional Development Budget
Compeer Financial has completed a $300 million sale of perpetual preferred stock, with Piper Sandler acting as the sole initial purchaser.
Insurers offer discounts for avoiding smoking and good driving because these practices are proven to mitigate risk and save them money. So should insurers and agricultural lenders offer farmers that look after their soil a ‘good soil discount’?. While it’s generally understood that cover cropping, reduced tillage, and crop rotations benefit soil, these practices are by no means ubiquitous, not least because there are high upfront costs, the benefits don’t come overnight, and there are no immediate financial incentives, says soil health nonprofit Land Core. Insurers and lenders, meanwhile, do not currently offer discounts for farmers engaging in such practices because their specific impacts at the field level, especially on crop yields, have not been quantified, it says. Until now