Estimate your total harvest cost per acre including combine, grain cart, trucking, and labor to budget this critical crop production expense.
Harvest is typically the most expensive single field operation in grain farming, often costing $25–$50 or more per acre when you account for the combine, grain cart, trucking, and labor. Despite its size, many operators have only a rough estimate of their true per-acre harvest cost because it involves multiple machines operating simultaneously.
This Harvest Cost Calculator helps you build a complete harvest cost estimate by combining the per-acre costs of each component: the combine (ownership and operating costs divided by its field capacity), the grain cart operation, trucking from field to storage or elevator, and any additional labor costs. You can compare your total against local custom harvest rates to determine whether owning your own harvest equipment is truly cost-effective.
Accurate harvest cost data feeds directly into crop enterprise budgets and is essential for evaluating whether to invest in newer combine headers, hire custom harvesters, or adjust your cropping plan.
Harvest costs are often underestimated because operators focus on the combine purchase price and forget about the supporting equipment, fuel, repairs, and labor that go along with it. This calculator aggregates all harvest components into a single per-acre number that you can compare against custom rates, use in your enterprise budgets, and track year over year to see cost trends.
Harvest $/ac = Combine $/hr ÷ Combine ac/hr + Grain cart $/ac + Trucking $/ac + Other $/ac
Result: $36.13/ac total harvest cost
Combine cost per acre = $210/hr ÷ 9 ac/hr = $23.33/ac. Add grain cart ($5.50) + trucking ($4.80) + other ($2.50) = $36.13/ac total. For 1,500 acres of corn, total harvest expense = $54,195.
Harvest is a coordinated operation involving multiple machines and operators working together. The combine is the most expensive piece, but it can't work without support equipment — a grain cart to keep the combine moving instead of driving to the truck, and trucks to haul grain to storage or market.
Each component has its own cost structure. The combine carries heavy ownership costs due to its high purchase price and relatively low annual hours. The grain cart tractor accumulates hours quickly during harvest but may be used for other operations the rest of the year. Trucking costs are heavily influenced by distance and road conditions.
The decision to own harvest equipment versus hiring custom harvesters depends on farm size, timeliness requirements, and capital availability. Custom harvesting eliminates the fixed costs of combine ownership but introduces scheduling risk — you can't always get a custom operator when conditions are ideal.
For farms under 1,500 acres of grain, custom harvest is often the lowest-cost option. For larger operations, owned equipment provides scheduling flexibility that justifies the capital investment. Some farms take a hybrid approach — owning enough capacity for most of their acres and hiring custom help to cover peak demand.
The biggest lever for reducing harvest cost per acre is increasing combine utilization — more annual hours spread the fixed costs further. Wider headers, faster unloading systems, and better logistics coordination all improve throughput. Regular maintenance reduces breakdown time during the critical harvest window.
Include ownership costs (depreciation, interest, insurance, housing), operating costs (fuel, lubrication, repairs, maintenance), and the operator's labor cost. A mid-size combine typically costs $150–$300/hr on a full-cost basis depending on age and annual usage.
Capacity depends on header width, crop type, yield, and field efficiency. For corn with a 12-row head: about 8–12 ac/hr. For soybeans with a 35-ft head: about 10–15 ac/hr. Your precision ag monitor may log actual acres per hour.
In many regions, custom combining rates are $30–$50/ac for corn and $25–$40/ac for soybeans. If your owned-harvest cost exceeds these rates, custom hiring saves money — especially if you farm fewer than 1,500–2,000 acres of grain.
Grain drying is typically a separate post-harvest cost rather than a field harvest cost. Use the Grain Drying Cost Calculator for that component. However, some operators combine these into one "harvest and handling" budget line.
Higher yields slow the combine, increasing cost per acre because the machine takes longer to process each acre. However, higher yields spread the cost over more bushels, so cost per bushel actually decreases with higher yields.
Header ownership and operating costs should be included in the combine hourly rate. If you have separate corn and soybean heads, allocate each header's cost to the respective crop acres.