Contract production can be a meaningful opportunity for a farm operation. For some producers, it may create a new income stream, support long-term growth, improve nutrient management, or provide a path for the next generation to become more involved in the business.
But like any major business decision, it should not be approached lightly.
Adding contract production to your operation often involves long-term planning, financial investment, new responsibilities, and changes to how your farm functions day to day. Before committing, it is important to step back and look closely at your current operation, your financial position, your goals, and your vision for the future.
Every farm is different. What makes sense for one operation may not be the right fit for another. The strongest decisions are made when you understand both the opportunity and the commitment.
If you are weighing whether contract production is the right next step, these five questions can help guide the conversation.
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1. What Does Contract Production Mean for My Finances?
The first place to start is your current financial position.
Contract production can offer a reliable source of income, but it may also require significant upfront investment. Before making a decision, take time to review the financial health of your operation and understand how this opportunity would affect both short-term cash flow and long-term stability.
Start by looking at:
- Current cash flow
- Existing debt obligations
- Available working capital
- Financing needs
- Interest rates and repayment terms
- Operating expenses
- Maintenance costs
- Your ability to manage unexpected changes
Ask yourself whether your operation can support additional debt without creating unnecessary strain. Consider how loan payments would fit into your current budget and whether projected income from contract production would provide enough margin to support the investment.
It is also important to think beyond the best-case scenario. Markets change. Input costs shift. Equipment, buildings and infrastructure require maintenance. A strong financial plan should account for both expected costs and potential surprises.
Before committing, you should have a clear understanding of how contract production would affect your overall financial picture. The goal is not just to add income. The goal is to add income in a way that strengthens the operation rather than limiting future options.
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2. What Am I Committing to in the Short and Long Term?
Contract production is not just a short-term project. It can shape the structure of your operation for years to come.
Before moving forward, consider the full timeline of the commitment. This includes the preparation phase, construction or facility upgrades, financing, startup requirements, ongoing management and long-term maintenance.
Short-term commitments may include:
- Site preparation
- Permitting or local approval requirements
- Construction planning
- Financing arrangements
- Utility access
- Equipment needs
- Labor planning
- Learning new management requirements
Long-term commitments may include:
- Loan payments
- Building maintenance
- Repairs and upgrades
- Daily animal care responsibilities
- Biosecurity protocols
- Recordkeeping
- Manure management
- Ongoing communication with the contracting company
It is easy to focus on the finished facility and the income it may generate. But the day-to-day responsibilities matter just as much. Contract production can add structure and predictability, but it also adds obligations that need to be managed consistently.
Understanding the full scope of the commitment helps you make a more confident decision. It also helps you avoid surprises later. Before signing an agreement or beginning construction, make sure you understand what will be expected of you, what support may be available and how the commitment fits into the current rhythm of your farm.
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3. What Capabilities Will This Add to My Operation?
A major benefit of contract production is that it may add more than income. It can also bring new capabilities to your operation.
For many farms, grower barns or livestock facilities can support nutrient management by providing access to manure that may be used as fertilizer. Depending on your crop acres, soil needs and nutrient plan, this can create potential fertilizer savings and contribute to the overall value of the investment.
In addition to fertilizer value, contract production may create opportunities to:
- Diversify farm income
- Improve long-term cash flow planning
- Make better use of existing land or labor
- Support future expansion
- Create a role for family members or the next generation
- Add structure to succession planning
- Strengthen the overall business model
For operations thinking about generational transition, this can be especially important. Contract production may provide a way for a son, daughter or younger family member to take on meaningful responsibility within the farm. It may also help support an additional person financially, depending on the size and structure of the operation.
That said, added capability also means added responsibility. New buildings, livestock care, manure management and contract requirements all need to fit within the operation’s labor, management and financial capacity.
The key question is not just, “What income will this bring?” It is also, “What will this allow our operation to do that we cannot do today?”
Bringing the next generation into the operation? Visit our Growing Forward® page for resources and support designed to help beginning farmers build financial skills and confidence.
4. How Much Flexibility Will I Have?
Flexibility is an important part of long-term farm planning.
Even the best plans need room to adjust. Weather, markets, input costs, labor availability, interest rates and family needs can all change over time. Before committing to contract production, think carefully about how much flexibility your operation will have after the investment is made.
Consider questions such as:
- Will the operation still have enough working capital?
- Can we handle unexpected repairs or cost increases?
- What happens if interest rates, utility costs or other expenses change?
- Will this limit our ability to invest in other areas of the farm?
- Do we have enough labor to manage the added responsibility?
- Will this commitment affect family time, off-farm work or other priorities?
A plan that looks good on paper should also hold up under pressure. Leaving room in your budget can help protect your operation when conditions change. If the financial plan is too tight from the beginning, even small disruptions can create stress.
Flexibility also applies to management. Contract production may require consistent schedules, specific protocols and regular communication. Make sure those expectations fit your management style and the realities of your operation.
The best decisions create opportunity without removing your ability to adapt.
Need help thinking through your financial picture? Explore the Knowledge Hub for articles and resources on farm finance, balance sheets, succession planning and more.
5. Does This Fit My Long-Term Vision?
Before committing to contract production, take time to step back and think about the future of your operation.
Where do you want the farm to be in five, ten or twenty years? Are you focused on growth? Stability? Bringing in the next generation? Paying down debt? Improving efficiency? Creating a more diversified income base?
Contract production should support your larger goals. If the investment helps move your operation toward the future you want, it may be worth serious consideration. If it creates obligations that do not align with your long-term plans, it may be worth slowing down and reevaluating.
Think about:
- Your goals for growth
- Your family’s role in the operation
- Succession planning
- Land and facility needs
- Labor availability
- Debt tolerance
- Lifestyle considerations
- Long-term business stability
A strong decision today should still make sense years from now. That does not mean every detail will go exactly as planned, but the overall direction should align with your vision.
Contract production is not only a financial decision. It is also an operational and family decision. The more clearly you understand your long-term goals, the easier it becomes to evaluate whether this opportunity fits.
Ready to explore your options? Connect with your local team or start a conversation through our website.
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