Farmers For Action held a protest with tractors parked outside Tesco in Enniskillen on Thursday night around 9pm. The event marked the final demonstration in a series of six weekly protests, one per county, at retail outlets each Thursday night since January 2026.

The group sent letters to Tesco and ten other major retailers with four questions requiring yes or no answers by March 1, 2026, allowing 14 extra days. Two key questions asked if the retailers would lobby the government to eliminate inheritance tax thresholds on farms and to enact a UK-wide Farm Welfare Bill. The bill would guarantee family farmers payment covering full production costs plus an inflation-linked margin.

Organizers distributed flyers at the Tesco store to inform shoppers about the questions and their link to public food supply. They plan to publish the retailers' responses across the UK and submit them to the Westminster Agriculture Committee.

The protests connect to UK inheritance tax changes from Autumn 2024, due April 2026. The Chancellor raised the threshold from £1 million to £2.5 million on December 24, 2025. Northern Ireland's Farmers For Action joined English, Welsh and Scottish farmers in multiple Westminster protests since December 11, 2024.

Coordinator William Taylor stated Northern Ireland must contribute to the national effort. Fermanagh farmer Chris Waldie participated to highlight challenges including food prices, government policies, food security and imports with lower welfare standards.