Farm Gate Price
The farm gate price is the net price a farmer receives for a commodity at the point it leaves the farm — after deducting transportation, storage, and any buyer-side discounts but before retail and processing markups. Farm gate prices typically capture 15–40% of final retail price for commodity crops and 40–70% for direct-to-consumer specialty crops (USDA ERS, 2023).
How Farm Gate Price Works
Farm gate price is the number that drives farm profitability. It differs from published commodity-exchange prices in several ways. (1) Basis — the difference between local cash price and the reference futures price, reflecting regional supply/demand, transportation to terminal markets, and storage costs. Corn basis in Iowa might be −$0.20 under Chicago Board of Trade futures, while in Brazil's interior it can be −$1.50 or more due to long road transport. (2) Quality discounts and premiums — moisture, protein, test weight, foreign matter, and damage all affect the price paid. A corn load 2% over target moisture typically takes a 2–5% price cut. (3) Contract vs spot — forward contracts lock in prices months before harvest at a premium or discount to spot depending on market expectations.
For smallholders and specialty growers, farm gate price depends heavily on buyer relationship and market channel. Direct-to-consumer sales (farmers markets, CSAs) typically deliver 60–80% of retail price but require labor and marketing time. Cooperative sales deliver 40–60% of retail with lower transaction costs. Wholesale or commodity buyer sales deliver 15–40% but scale to any volume. Globally, IFPRI estimates that 60–80% of smallholder farmers in developing countries capture less than 30% of retail value due to weak market power and thin infrastructure.
Tracking farm gate price per ton across seasons is essential farm-management practice. Combined with production cost per ton, it computes unit margin directly. If farm gate corn price is €180/ton and cost of production (see cost-of-production) is €165/ton, unit margin is €15/ton — a thin buffer that can turn negative quickly if weather or market conditions deteriorate. WiseYield's financial module records farm gate prices per sale and surfaces trend and variance analytics across seasons.
Sources
- USDA Economic Research Service (2023). Price spreads from farm to consumer.
- IFPRI (2022). Smallholder market participation and farm gate prices.