Scottish farmers are set to hold a rally outside Holyrood to urge the government to increase its funding for agricultural support.
The news follows angry scenes outside Westminster in London last week where thousands of furious farmers gathered to protest against changes to the inheritance tax relief for the industry.
But while UK ministers doubled down on those plans, the Scottish government has said it is "unequivocal" in its support of the sector, the BBC reports.
Farming union NFU Scotland is calling for the Scottish government to raise its the overall budget for farmers by £50million to £776million.
It also wants longer term funding commitments over several years to provide financial stability.
EU rules on multi-year settlements meant farmers could be given certainty over funding for up to seven years at a time, but since Brexit the UK government sets those budgets annually.
Jonnie Hall, NFU Scotland's director of policy said: "Our figures show that a modest budget increase in the agricultural portfolio would deliver a strong return on investment, fostering employment and growth in areas with limited economic alternatives while advancing climate and nature goals."
Rural Affairs Secretary Mairi Gougeon said: "The Scottish government is unequivocal in our support for Scotland’s farmers and crofters.
"They play a vital role fuelling our rural communities and making possible our world-class food and drink sectors and the UK government Budget will penalise them by failing to reverse the real terms cuts of previous years and failing to provide the multi-year certainty they require."
The UK government is steadfast in its position that the "vast majority" of farmers would be unaffected by the inheritance tax changes, with only the wealthiest impacted.
Scotland's Finance Secretary Shona Robison is due to deliver her Budget for 2025/26 on Wednesday next week.