Blueberry Farming Startup Costs For A 5-Hectare Launch
Blueberry Farming
Key Takeaways
Land costs split: 1 hectare owned, 4 leased.
Planting costs depend on count, price, and yield ramp.
Irrigation, equipment, and protection need user-entered quotes.
Year 1 planning assumes 5% yield loss and heavy variable costs.
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Startup CAPEX Calculator
This estimates capitalized startup assets only, so you can size the cash needed before the first harvest.
!
CAPEX only This calculator excludes inventory, payroll runway, seasonal labor, lease payments, deposits, debt service, owner draw, insurance, working capital, and operating expenses. It is meant for capitalized startup assets only.
What does the CAPEX tab show in Blueberry Farming?
This screenshot shows the CAPEX tab in the Blueberry Farming Financial Model Template; review startup cost amounts, timing, and depreciation/amortization. Open it and review.
Key screenshot highlights
Land, plants, irrigation, equipment
$61.8k fixed overhead
$185k Year 1 payroll
$7.2k lease cost
Months 1-12 launch timing
Harvest months 5-8 only
Split startup and working capital
Validate quotes and site suitability
Yield ramp and depreciation
Check funding sources
Blueberry Farming Financial Model
5-Year Financial Projections
100% Editable
Investor-Approved Valuation Models
MAC/PC Compatible, Fully Unlocked
No Accounting Or Financial Knowledge
What does blueberry farm site preparation cost?
Blueberry farm site preparation is not a one-price job: start with soil testing, pH, drainage, clearing, grading, raised beds, mulch, organic matter, irrigation access, and road access before you price the land. For Year 1, the source data shows $15,000 per owned hectare and $150 per leased hectare per month. Poor drainage or unsuitable soil can push you toward higher site-prep CAPEX or a different site, and exact prep dollars should stay quote-based unless you have bids.
Check first
Test soil before buying.
Check pH and drainage.
Confirm road access and water.
Use local agronomic advice.
Price drivers
Owned land: $15,000 per hectare.
Leased land: $150 per hectare monthly.
Drainage fixes can raise CAPEX.
Bad soil can change the site.
How much money do you need to start a blueberry farm?
You need about $269,000 to start a modeled 5-hectare Blueberry Farming launch before quote-based CAPEX for plants, irrigation, equipment, fencing, netting, and harvest handling; for context, see What Is The Current Growth Trend Of Blueberry Farming Business?. Here’s the quick math: $15,000 land purchase, $7,200 first-year lease, $61,800 fixed overhead, and $185,000 payroll.
Startup Cash
Model size: 5 hectares
Owned land: 20%
Leased land: 80%
Base funding: $269,000
Cash Timing
Year 1 yield: 1,500 units/hectare
Year 5 yield: 7,000 units/hectare
Harvest months: 5 to 8
Keep reserves before harvest cash
What should a blueberry farm funding plan include?
Blueberry Farming funding should show the land plan, CAPEX timing, yield ramp, harvest timing, product mix, operating costs, and the cash flow gap. Start with 5 hectares in Year 1 growing to 15 hectares by Year 5, with 20% owned land rising to 35% and a 5% yield loss built in. Keep it planning-led, not product-led, even if Year 1 prices range from $9 for U-pick to $25 for jam or preserves.
Core inputs
5 hectares in Year 1
15 hectares by Year 5
20% owned land in Year 1
35% owned land by Year 5
Revenue assumptions
50% fresh
25% U-pick
15% frozen
5% jam or preserves, 5% juice
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
Startup cost summary for a blueberry farm covering the main buildout CAPEX and the non-CAPEX cash buffer needed to launch.
Highlighted CAPEX$400,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$23,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$423,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Land preparation and initial planting (5 hectares)
$150,000
5 hectares established in Year 1
Yes
Primary tractor and implements
$80,000
Field prep and harvest support equipment
Yes
Irrigation and water infrastructure
$60,000
Phase 1 irrigation for planted area
Yes
Cold storage and harvest handling
$75,000
Post-harvest cooling and handling capacity
Yes
Initial fencing and farm protection
$35,000
Perimeter protection and access control
Yes
Cash buffer
$23,000
Month 29 minimum cash and payroll timing
No
Blueberry Farming Core Five Startup Costs
Land and Site Preparation Startup Expense
Land Mix
Separate land purchase from site prep. For 5 cultivated hectares, this plan assumes 1 hectare owned at $15,000 and 4 hectares leased at $150 per hectare per month, or $7,200 in year 1. Any lease deposit is extra. This cost buys access to land, not clearing, drainage, or planting.
Site Work
Budget for soil testing, pH adjustment, organic matter, drainage, clearing, grading, and access roads only if the site needs them. The key checks are simple: is the land already suitable, does it have water access, and does it need major earthwork? If yes, site prep can become a major startup line.
Trim Waste
Ask for separate quotes for clearing, grading, drainage, and road work, so you only pay for what the land really needs. Good drainage and farm access can save a lot; poor ground can push startup costs up fast. Keep land conditions front and center before you buy or sign a lease.
Lease Terms
Review the lease for term length, renewal rights, and who pays for site repairs. If the lease requires a deposit, treat it as a separate cash need from monthly rent. For this setup, the first-year lease math is 4 × $150 × 12 = $7,200, so cash planning should cover rent and any upfront deposit together.
Blueberry Plants and Planting Startup Expense
Plant Count
Blueberry plants are the base of this startup cost. Use the plant count and unit price you get from nursery quotes, then add planting labor, mulch, replacement plants, and early establishment care. There is no single density or cultivar mix here, because region, soil, market channel, and harvest method change the plan.
Spacing Mix
Spacing drives plant density, labor, and yield. Use the layout that fits your soil and picking method, then tie it to the ramp: 1,500 units/hectare in Year 1, 2,500 in Year 2, 4,000 in Year 3, and 7,000 in Year 5, with 5% loss planned in.
Use user-entered plant count.
Price each nursery plant separately.
Match spacing to harvest method.
What To Include
This line item should cover nursery plants, cultivar mix, planting labor, mulch, replacement plants, and the first round of establishment care. The source model gives cultivated area and yield ramp, not plant unit cost, so the calculator should use user-entered quotes for plant count and plant price.
Ask for cultivar-specific pricing.
Separate labor from plant cost.
Budget for dead-stock replacements.
Yield Link
Here’s the quick math: at the source plan’s 5 hectares, Year 1 output is 7,500 units before loss and 7,125 units after the 5% planning loss. Year 2 is 12,500, Year 3 is 20,000, and Year 5 is 35,000 before loss. Planting choices should protect that ramp.
Blueberry Farm Irrigation Startup Expense
Water Access
Start with water rights, flow, and power. Irrigation cost here covers a well or water hookup, pumps, filtration, drip lines, fertigation, and any frost-protection load. Base utilities are $400 per month, or $4,800 per year, and Year 1 variable fuel, utilities, and maintenance can reach 60% of revenue.
Cost Inputs
Set irrigation CAPEX as a user-entered per-area input, since no vendor unit cost is given. Use separate fields for pumps, filtration, drip lines, fertigation, and site power work. Ask if the site already has water rights, power, and enough flow during harvest months 5 to 8.
Enter cost by area, not guesswork.
Quote well and pump work separately.
Check harvest-month water flow first.
Climate Load
Water source and regional climate can change this estimate a lot. Hotter sites and frost-prone sites need more load on pumps, power, and protection, so utility use can jump fast. One clean rule: if frost protection is likely, plan for higher winter power and fuel, not just summer irrigation.
Budget Check
If the farm already has a reliable water source, existing power, and pressure at the field edge, startup spend drops. If it needs a new well, long runs, or frost-protection upgrades, irrigation becomes a major early cash need, so budget the system before planting any acreage.
Blueberry Farm Equipment Startup Expense
Field Gear
Equipment for a blueberry farm covers the workhorse set: tractor, mower, sprayer, spreader, trailers, hand tools, harvest bins, sorting tables, and a packing area. If you add cold storage or mechanical harvesting, keep those separate because they change the budget fast. For this model, price each item by quote, then size the package to the farm’s 5 hectares now and 15 hectares by Year 5.
Cost Build
Build this as three equipment tiers: used for small acreage, base for the 5-hectare start, and full commercial for later scale. The estimate needs item count, quote per item, and whether packing space or cold storage is included. Don’t mix one-time purchases with operations. Maintenance is $1,000 per month, and Year 1 variable fuel, utilities, and maintenance run at 60% of revenue.
Quote each major item separately
Split small and commercial setups
Keep packing optional
Scale Fit
Match the kit to acreage and harvest style. A 5-hectare start can run on lighter used gear, but a move toward 15 hectares needs better sprayer capacity, more trailers, and stronger handling gear. The trap is buying for peak Year 5 on Day 1. Better to stage purchases so equipment growth follows planted area and product mix.
Buy Smart
Cut startup cash by buying used tractors and field tools first, then reserve quotes for sprayer, bins, and packing gear where condition matters most. The big mistake is overbuying cold storage or mechanical harvest systems before yield justifies them. Keep the budget flexible, because the right package depends on whether the farm stays hand-picked or shifts toward larger commercial volumes.
Fencing, Netting, and Crop Protection Startup Expense
What it covers
This cost covers deer fencing, bird netting, signs, security, pest monitoring tools, and basic farm infrastructure. Separate durable CAPEX from consumable crop-protection products. For Year 1 planning, budget $300 per month for security systems and monitoring, plus sustainable fertilizers and crop protection at 30% of revenue.
How to size it
Size it by area, perimeter, or a supplier quote. Ask if the site has deer pressure, bird pressure, public U-pick access, and full perimeter needs. If fencing is perimeter-based, use fence length; if netting is row-based, use covered area. The 5% yield loss is your planning loss factor.
Keep it clean
Keep fixed protection separate from crop inputs so you can see what lasts more than one season. Here’s the quick math: a $300 monthly monitoring line is $3,600 a year, before any crop-protection spend. What this estimate hides is site risk; weak perimeter control can turn into yield loss fast.
Track by risk
Use one line for durable items like fencing and netting, and a separate line for yearly crop-protection spend. That split makes it easier to compare quotes, spot overspend, and tie protection cost back to yield loss. If the farm has open access or heavy wildlife pressure, the budget should move up before planting, not after.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Blueberry farming costs move fast with land control, harvest gear, and storage. Lean, Base, and Full show how leased acres, owned land, and handling assets change the startup bill.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario
Lean LaunchTest plot
Base LaunchSmall commercial
Full LaunchFull commercial
Launch model
A small leased-land start with used equipment, light storage, and most packing or sales work outsourced.
A 5-hectare launch with 20% owned land, a $15,000 land purchase, a $7,200 first-year lease, $61,800 fixed overhead, and $185,000 payroll before quote-based CAPEX.
A larger build with stronger irrigation, bigger equipment, fencing, netting, cold storage, and acreage growth toward 15 hectares by Year 5.
Typical setup
A test plot with basic irrigation and only the handling gear needed to move fresh berries.
A 5-hectare farm with one owned hectare, leased acres, and the full starter build in the model.
A scaled farm with more owned land, more handling assets, and a faster ramp in planted acres.
Cost drivers
leased land
used tractor
basic irrigation
outsourced packing
small labor crew
land purchase
land lease
irrigation
cold storage
payroll
land expansion
irrigation upgrades
fencing and netting
cold storage
added staff
Planning rangeCAPEX only
$200,000 - $400,000Lower cash need
$750,000 - $850,000Model-based plan
$1,000,000 - $1,500,000Scale build
Best fit
Fits founders testing soil, yield, and local demand before they commit to owned land.
Fits operators ready for a real commercial farm with the source plan as the starting point.
Fits teams aiming for a full commercial operation with more control over yield, storage, and harvest flow.
!
Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions built from the model inputs, not exact vendor quotes or offers.
The modeled 5-hectare launch shows about $269,000 before quote-based plant, irrigation, equipment, fencing, and handling CAPEX That includes $15,000 for 1 owned hectare, $7,200 for 4 leased hectares in the first year, $61,800 in fixed overhead, and $185,000 in payroll The final number depends on site work and infrastructure quotes
The model shows a multi-year yield ramp, not instant full production Base yield starts at 1,500 units per hectare in Year 1, rises to 2,500 in Year 2, reaches 4,000 in Year 3, and gets to 7,000 by Year 5 A 5% yield loss is also built into the plan
No, but ownership changes the cash need and risk profile The source plan starts with 20% owned land and 80% leased land on 5 hectares That means 1 hectare purchased at $15,000 and 4 hectares leased at $150 per hectare per month, or $7,200 in first-year lease cost
Start lean by limiting owned land, using leased acreage, delaying nonessential handling assets, and buying only the equipment needed for the first harvest window In the model, first-year harvest occurs only in months 5 through 8, while fixed overhead is $5,150 per month and payroll averages about $15,400 per month
Hold enough working capital to cover the early cash gap before harvest revenue arrives The model has no harvest in months 1 through 4, but still carries about $5,150 in monthly fixed overhead, about $15,400 in monthly payroll, and $600 in monthly lease cost That’s roughly $84,700 before harvest, excluding crop inputs and repairs
About the author
Charles Bryant
Business Plan Writer
Charles Bryant is a business plan writer at Financial Models Lab who helps founders make sense of startup costs and choose realistic business ideas. He focuses on founder-friendly business numbers, with clear guidance on operating expense planning and startup planning without heavy finance jargon. Charles writes from a practical founder perspective, making complex decisions feel manageable for readers who want useful, realistic insight before they start a business.
Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.