Calculate dry matter intake, percentage, and feed conversion for livestock and pet nutrition. Compare feeds on dry matter basis for accurate diet formulation.
Dry matter (DM) is the foundation of all animal nutrition calculations. When you remove all the water from a feed ingredient, what remains is the dry matter—the portion that actually contains nutrients like protein, energy, fiber, and minerals. Since different feeds contain vastly different amounts of moisture (fresh grass is about 80% water, while hay is only 10-15% water), comparing feeds on an "as-fed" basis is misleading.
This calculator converts between as-fed and dry matter nutrient values, calculates dry matter intake (DMI) based on body weight and production level, and lets you compare multiple feeds side by side on a true dry matter basis. It's essential for livestock producers formulating rations, veterinarians assessing diet adequacy, and pet owners comparing canned versus dry pet foods.
For dairy cattle, dry matter intake typically ranges from 3-4% of body weight, while beef cattle consume 2-3% BW in dry matter. Understanding and optimizing DMI is the single most important factor in animal production efficiency, as it determines the total nutrient supply available for maintenance, growth, reproduction, and milk production.
Formulating animal diets on an as-fed basis leads to under- or over-feeding because moisture masks the true nutrient density. This calculator instantly converts any feed to its dry matter equivalent, enabling accurate ration balancing and side-by-side feed comparisons. This dry matter calculator helps you compare outcomes quickly and reduce avoidable mistakes when making day-to-day care decisions. Use the estimate as a planning baseline and confirm final decisions with a qualified professional when risk is high.
Dry Matter % = 100 − Moisture %. Nutrient on DM basis = (Nutrient as-fed %) / (DM % / 100). DMI (kg/day) = Body Weight (kg) × DMI Factor (% BW). As-Fed Amount = DMI / (DM % / 100).
Result: 22.86% CP (DM basis), 21 kg DMI/day
With 65% moisture, the DM% is 35%. The crude protein on a DM basis is 8% / 0.35 = 22.86%. A 600 kg dairy cow at 3.5% BW DMI needs 21 kg of dry matter per day, which is 60 kg as-fed of this silage.
The "as-fed" value is what you see on feed labels—it includes all the water. A typical corn silage might contain 35% dry matter and 65% moisture. If the lab reports 8% crude protein on an as-fed basis, the true protein concentration in the nutritive portion is 8/0.35 = 22.9% on a DM basis. This correction is vital for comparing silage to hay (85-90% DM) or grain (85-88% DM).
Ruminants like cattle and sheep have their DMI limited by rumen fill when eating high-fiber diets. The neutral detergent fiber (NDF) content of forages is the primary physical constraint. High-quality forages with low NDF and high NDF digestibility allow the animal to eat more, increasing total nutrient supply. Other factors include environmental heat stress (which can reduce DMI by 10-25%), social factors in group housing, and disease status.
Professional nutritionists formulate diets using dry matter values exclusively. A typical dairy TMR (total mixed ration) might be designed for 24 kg DMI, composed of 60% forage and 40% concentrate on a DM basis. The as-fed amounts for mixing depend on each ingredient's moisture content. If corn silage is 35% DM, you need 24 × 0.60 / 0.35 = 41.1 kg of as-fed silage per cow. Monitoring mixer weights in as-fed terms while thinking in DM terms is the everyday reality of feed management.
Feeds vary enormously in moisture content. A silage with 8% protein as-fed may actually be higher quality than a grain with 12% protein as-fed once you account for moisture. DM basis gives the true nutrient concentration.
You can use a microwave oven test, Koster moisture tester, NIR analyzer, or send a sample to a forage testing lab. Lab analysis is most accurate but the microwave test is a practical on-farm option.
Key factors include body weight, production level (milk yield, growth rate), forage quality (NDF digestibility), feed palatability, environmental temperature, and stage of lactation or gestation. This keeps planning practical and lowers the chance of preventable errors.
Check the guaranteed analysis for moisture (max). Subtract from 100 to get DM%. Then divide each nutrient % by DM% to get the dry matter value. This is the only fair way to compare canned (78% moisture) to dry (10% moisture) pet food.
Neutral Detergent Fiber (NDF) represents the cell wall content—cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. High NDF feeds fill the rumen faster, physically limiting intake. Forages with NDF below 40% DM allow higher DMI.
Drying removes water and concentrates nutrients on a per-weight basis, but some heat-sensitive vitamins may be lost. The dry matter nutrient content itself doesn't change with normal drying—only the concentration per unit of total weight changes.