How to Calculate Feedlot Profit
Work through feed costs, weight gain, selling price and margin before you buy weaners or commit to a finishing batch.
Read the guideFarm planning guides
Practical guides written for livestock farmers — especially on cattle, sheep, poultry and winter-feeding farms in South Africa.
Each guide explains a planning concept in plain language, with examples you can apply on your own farm. Use them alongside the free farm calculators when costing feed, supplements, hay or poultry batches.
These guides help farmers understand the calculations behind feed costs, livestock growth, hay and supplement planning, and profit estimates — in plain language with practical examples. Read a guide for the concept, then run your own figures in the matching free calculator.
Work through feed costs, weight gain, selling price and margin before you buy weaners or commit to a finishing batch.
Read the guideWhat average daily gain means for finishers, realistic targets and how growth rate changes days on feed and profit.
Read the guideUnderstand feed conversion ratio in plain language and why it matters when maize, concentrate or complete feed prices move.
Read the guideAvoid the input errors that make profit estimates look better or worse than they really are.
Read the guideWhy dry matter matters when you compare bags, bales and rations — and how intake affects real feed cost.
Read the guideCompare feeds by dry matter, crude protein and price so you buy value, not just the cheapest bag.
Read the guidePlan daily lick intake, bags required and total supplement cost for cattle, sheep or goats on veld.
Read the guideEstimate feed bags, cost per bird and margin planning for broilers, layers and pullets.
Read the guideWork out true bale cost, daily requirements, bales for the season and make-versus-buy decisions.
Read the guideWhen to use free calculators, what they can tell you and how to get reliable planning numbers.
Read the guideThese guides and calculators are planning tools only. Always confirm feeding programmes, nutrition and product recommendations with your feed supplier, nutritionist or veterinarian.