What grows here
Idaho grows roughly a third of the potatoes in the United States. The bulk comes out of two stretches. The Magic Valley runs along the Snake River through Twin Falls, Burley, and Rupert. Eastern Idaho runs through Idaho Falls, Aberdeen, Blackfoot, and American Falls. Russet Burbank is still the dominant variety because the processors built their fry lines around it, but you will also see Ranger Russet, Russet Norkotah, Clearwater, and a growing share of specialty reds and yellows for fresh pack.
The big processors anchor the region. Lamb Weston has plants in Twin Falls, American Falls, and Boardman (just over the Oregon line, but it pulls Idaho potatoes). J.R. Simplot runs plants in Caldwell and Heyburn — Simplot is headquartered in Boise. McCain Foods runs a plant in Burley. Idahoan Foods runs dehydrated mash and flake out of Lewisville and Idaho Falls. Beyond the processors, hundreds of independent growers and shed operators move fresh pack to grocery and foodservice.
The hiring calendar
- March through May: Pre-season hiring at growers and sheds. Irrigation techs, equipment mechanics, fresh-pack line workers, and shipping clerks. Processors do year-round hiring but spring is when openings open up.
- August: Harvest crew assembly starts. Growers begin booking truck drivers and harvester operators for September.
- Mid-September through late October: Harvest. The biggest seasonal labor window of the year. Truck drivers, harvester swampers, cellar hands, piler operators.
- November through February: Cellar work, fresh-pack lines, processor plants. The deepest slowdown is December through February — many seasonal hands move on or pick up other work.
Where to actually look
Major employers. Search the careers pages directly:
- Lamb Weston careers — they list openings by plant.
- J.R. Simplot careers — food, agribusiness, and AgriBusiness Group jobs are posted separately.
- McCain Foods careers.
- Idahoan Foods careers.
- Sun-Maid, Pleasant Valley, Wada Farms, and Walters Farms — most of the larger fresh-pack growers list jobs on their own sites or on AgCareers.com.
State workforce system. The Idaho Department of Labor runs offices across the state and posts ag jobs on IdahoWorks. The Twin Falls, Burley, Idaho Falls, and Pocatello offices are the closest to the potato counties. Walk in, do not just browse online — the local office staff know which growers are hiring and how to be referred.
Grower association. The Idaho Potato Commission does not directly hire field workers, but its member directory is a who-is-who of the industry. If you are trying to find growers in a specific county, the commission's grower list is the cleanest source.
Migrant and seasonal services. Idaho has a State Monitor Advocate in the Department of Labor, the federal role that monitors migrant and seasonal farmworker employment. The USDOL Employment and Training Administration publishes the current list of State Monitor Advocates by state. Community Council of Idaho is a long-standing nonprofit that runs migrant and seasonal farmworker services across the state — housing, English classes, job referrals.
Housing reality
Some Idaho growers and crews provide temporary housing during harvest, especially for crews coming up from out of state. "Barracks-style" usually means a converted bunkhouse on the operation — beds, a shared shower, a kitchen, sometimes wifi if you are lucky. It is not a hotel. If you are working a fresh-pack line at a processor or shed, you are on your own for housing — Twin Falls, Burley, and Idaho Falls all have rental markets, but rooms get tight when harvest crews arrive. Many year-round workers live in trailers, manufactured homes outside town, or shared rentals. If you are driving in from out of state and the operation does not provide housing, line it up before you show up.
Language and documentation
A meaningful share of the Idaho potato workforce is Spanish-speaking. Bilingual workers — especially crew leads — are in demand. If you only speak English, you will still find work, but you will be working alongside Spanish-speaking crews and learning operational Spanish whether you mean to or not.
For day-one paperwork, plan to show up with a state-issued driver's license or ID, a Social Security card (or a passport, or for some employers an ITIN), and proof of work authorization for the I-9. If you are claiming exempt or have any direct-deposit setup, bring a voided check.
What this region is NOT
Idaho is not a year-round labor market in the way California vegetables or Florida citrus is. Winter is genuinely slow. Many seasonal hands work three to four months hard and then either travel, switch industries, or stretch unemployment and side work until spring. The high desert winters are cold and the rural counties are sparsely served — if you do not have a reliable vehicle, you will be stuck. The Magic Valley is more populated and easier to live in than the smaller Eastern Idaho towns; weigh that before you commit to a job two hours from a real grocery store.
National resources
- USDOL Wage and Hour Division — file complaints about unpaid wages, H-2A violations, or unsafe conditions. They have field offices and a national hotline.
- AgCareers.com — the largest ag-specific job board in the US. Free to job seekers.
- National Council of Agricultural Employers (NCAE) — industry trade group; their member list overlaps heavily with employers who hire ag labor.
- Farmworker Justice — national nonprofit focused on farmworker rights, especially around H-2A and migrant labor. Good for know-your-rights resources.
- Search "[your state] potato growers association" — most major potato states have one and most maintain a member directory.