How Much Does It Cost To Start A 2-Hectare Lavender Farm?
Lavender Farming Bundle
The cost to start a lavender farm depends most on land access, field setup, irrigation, planting stock, drying space, and whether you add oil distillation In the researched planning model, the first operating year starts with 2 leased hectares at $250 per hectare per month, so land lease alone is $500 per month or $6,000 for the first year before CAPEX and launch expenses The model excludes land purchase in the first year, while later owned land is priced at $25,000 per hectare when ownership begins Plan working capital through harvest in model month 7 and customer cash collection cycles of 3 to 6 months, because early sales timing can matter as much as the farm setup bill
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Lavender Farm CAPEX
Estimates capitalized startup assets for a lavender farm only, not operating cash needs.
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Startup CAPEX only This calculator excludes working capital, payroll runway, inventory, deposits, debt service, taxes, financing costs, owner pay, and first-year marketing. Land purchase is not in the default total. Harvest starts in Month 7, and cash collection can lag 3 to 6 months.
Does the model show launch costs and funding need?
This screenshot shows the CAPEX tab in the Lavender Farming Financial Model Template, covering field setup, irrigation, equipment, drying space, and optional distillation with depreciation or amortization. It should also tie startup costs, working capital, and funding need to the $500/month lease, month 7 harvest, 3 to 6 month sales lag, 2 hectares, 50% yield loss, 130% Year 1 direct cost rate, and about $213,655 Year 1 gross crop value before costs—open the model and adjust assumptions.
Key screenshot checks
Field setup and irrigation
Startup costs by category
Working capital timing
Lavender Farming Financial Model
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What drives lavender farm cost per acre and distillation equipment cost?
Lavender farm cost per acre is driven mostly by setup: soil correction, drainage, bed prep, weed suppression, plant density, irrigation, fencing, drying space, and processing choices. Use hectares from the model first; US readers can convert to acres later if needed. The land model assigns 400% to essential oil, 200% to culinary lavender, 150% to floral bundles, 150% to sachets, and 100% to craft or event dried lavender, and distillation is optional unless oil is the main product.
Main cost drivers
Cultivated area sets scale.
Soil correction adds early cash.
Drainage and bed prep matter.
Weed control, irrigation, fencing, drying space.
When distillation pays
Oil needs the most processing.
Skip it for dried product sales.
Use 50% yield loss in pricing.
Test against Year 1 oil at $150.
What hidden costs and working capital does a lavender farm need?
Lavender Farming needs more cash than field setup alone because hidden costs show up before harvest money does. For a quick benchmark, see How Much Does The Owner Of Lavender Farming Typically Make?—the big gap is that harvest starts around month 7, but sales can take 3 to 6 months to collect. If you only fund plants and irrigation, you can run short when harvest labor and packaging hit.
Hidden cost hits
Irrigation repairs and replacement plants
Seasonal labor, fuel, and market fees
Website setup, packaging, and labels
Storage bins, drying loss, and insurance
Cash timing pressure
Build cash for harvest and handling
Plan for 50% yield loss in inventory
Year 1 direct costs can reach 130% of revenue
Raw material and processing can be 90% of revenue
How should lavender farm funding and financial projections be planned?
Lavender Farming funding should start with the full startup gap: CAPEX, pre-opening expenses, working capital, and any excluded items, then build Year 1 on 2 hectares leased at $250 per hectare per month with no land purchase in the base case. Here’s the quick math: 0.8 hectares for oil at 1,500 yield and 95% at $150 gives $171,000 before costs, and total modeled Year 1 gross crop value across all five product lines is about $213,655. Use that model to test cash runway, funding need, and whether optional distillation pays back.
Funding stack
Add CAPEX first.
Include pre-opening spend.
Hold working capital separately.
Keep excluded items visible.
Year 1 crop math
2 hectares leased base case.
$250 per hectare per month.
$171,000 oil-line value.
$213,655 total gross crop value.
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table shows startup CAPEX and excluded launch cash for a lavender farm, using researched ranges for field setup, equipment, and working capital.
Highlighted CAPEX$180,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$379,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$559,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Land Preparation & Planting Equipment
$40,000
Field prep, bed shaping, and planting setup
Yes
Irrigation System Installation
$25,000
Water lines, pumps, and install complexity
Yes
Initial Lavender Planting Stock
$30,000
Plant count, cultivar mix, and loss replacement
Yes
Processing & Drying Equipment
$35,000
Drying racks, handling gear, and post-harvest setup
Yes
Distillation Still (Small Scale)
$50,000
Optional oil processing capacity and install scope
Yes
Working Capital Runway
$379,000
Month 7 harvest timing and 3-6 month sales cycles before cash turns
No
Lavender Farming Core Five Startup Costs
Land, Site Preparation, And Field Establishment Startup Expense
Lease Cost
With 2 cultivated hectares in Year 1 and 0% owned land, the base setup is a lease, not a land buy. Lease math is simple: 2 hectares Ă— $250/hectare/month = $500/month, or $6,000/year, before any soil or field work. That keeps land cost separate from prep and lets you fund the first planting block cleanly.
Field Prep
This cost covers soil testing, pH adjustment, drainage, bed shaping, weed suppression, compost or amendments, access lanes, irrigation-ready layout, and planting rows. Price it by hectare and by quote: test fees, grading work, material rates, and labor hours. One clean rule: prep the field for water movement and row access before you buy plants.
Scale Plan
Start with the smallest layout that matches Year 1 demand, then scale from 2 hectares to 3, 4, 5, and 6 hectares by Year 5, and to 10 hectares later. At the same lease rate, 6 hectares is $1,500/month and 10 hectares is $2,500/month. The first-pass savings come from clean grading and row spacing.
Buy Later
Don’t mix buying land with preparing land unless you’re raising money for both. Lease first, prove the field layout, then decide if owned land at $25,000/hectare is worth the extra capital. That keeps startup cash focused on drainage, rows, and harvest-ready access now.
Lavender Plants And Planting Stock Startup Expense
Plant Mix
Start with the crop mix, not a plant count. The model gives hectares, so the budget needs planted area, spacing, expected survival, and cultivar type. Weight land use by product line: 400% essential oil, 200% culinary dried lavender, 150% floral bundles, 150% sachets, and 100% craft or event dried lavender.
Stock Cost
This line covers plugs or young plants, shipping, and planting labor. Use quotes for unit plant price, freight, and labor per hectare, then add a replacement allowance for dead plants. Culinary, ornamental, and oil-focused types can cost different amounts and need different handling, so build the budget by cultivar, not one blended rate.
Cut Waste
Avoid overbuying by tying the order to the first planting phase and one backup batch. A 50% yield-loss guardrail is a blunt but useful planning buffer for replacements and output. It helps if shipment timing slips or some plugs fail after planting, and it keeps the cash plan honest.
Survival Buffer
The first planting invoice should be built as plants + freight + labor + replacement reserve. Keep the reserve high enough to cover replanting after establishment, then adjust once you know real field survival by cultivar and soil block. That gives you a plant stock budget by planted area, product line, replacement rate, and planting labor.
Irrigation, Water Access, Fencing, And Farm Infrastructure Startup Expense
Controlled Water
Lavender needs controlled water, not more water. For 2 cultivated hectares in Year 1, budget for drip lines, pumps, filters, main and lateral lines, valves, water access, frost or drought protection, deer fencing, gates, and field access. Design drainage with irrigation by region and soil type, because wet roots raise failure risk. Keep the $500/month land lease separate from one-time CAPEX.
Budget Inputs
Build the budget from hectares planted, field shape, fence length, water source distance, and vendor quotes. Cost covers drip kits, pumps, filters, main lines, lateral lines, valves, deer fencing, gates, and utility tie-ins. Scale every line to the first 2 hectares, then add repair cash in working capital, because water issues can hit before model month 7 harvest.
Trim the Spend
Cut cost by zoning irrigation to soil and slope, and by fencing only the planted block. Don’t oversize pumps or main lines for later expansion. Buy repair parts early and keep them on site. The $500/month lease is an operating cost, not CAPEX, so separate it from infrastructure payback. One line: the goal is not more water, it’s controlled water with dry roots.
Scale the Field
Design the layout so Year 1 can start at 2 hectares and expand to 3, 4, 5, and 6 hectares by Year 5, then later to 10 hectares. If land purchase starts, treat it as a separate funding need at $25,000 per hectare, not part of site prep or irrigation CAPEX.
Equipment, Tools, Drying, Storage, And Harvest-Readiness Startup Expense
Harvest-Ready Setup
This spend covers the gear that gets the first crop off the field: hand tools, harvest knives, pruning tools, carts, bins, drying racks, fans, shade, storage bins, and basic workspace upgrades. The cutoff is model month 7, so the setup has to be ready before harvest starts.
Size The Budget
Build the budget from harvest method and hectares, not a single flat number. For the first 2 cultivated hectares, separate a low-capital hand-harvest setup from a larger mechanized option, then price each unit, quote, and month of coverage. Drying must handle culinary lavender, floral bundles, sachets, and craft or event dried lavender, which together represent 600% of land allocation; essential oil is 400% and may need separate processing capacity.
Count tools by harvest day.
Quote racks and fans.
Plan packaging before month 7.
Keep It Lean
Keep the first setup modular. Buy hand tools, bins, and drying racks first, then rent mower or small tractor access if acreage stays small. The main savings come from shared drying space, simple shade, and reusable storage, but don’t cut airflow or clean handling. One clean rule: if drying spills into storage, quality risk rises fast.
Rent heavy gear first.
Use shared drying space.
Separate wet and dry zones.
Quote It By Flow
Get supplier quotes for each unit, then multiply by quantity, plus shipping, workspace changes, and the number of drying days needed before harvest. The budget should stay tied to hectares, harvest method, and post-harvest flow. If tools, racks, and bins are not ready before month 7, the first crop can back up on the floor.
Processing, Packaging, Compliance, Insurance, And Sales Launch Startup Expense
Launch Scope
If you skip distillation, you can still launch with bundles, culinary lavender, sachets, or bulk dried lavender. Build the budget by channel, not as one lump sum. For planning, use 90% raw material and processing plus 40% packaging and fulfillment, or 130% combined direct cost, before overhead.
Cost Inputs
Estimate this cost from units, quotes, and months of coverage. Cover jars or bags for culinary lavender, sachet materials, labels, food-safe handling, business registration, farm permits, general liability insurance, market booth setup, basic branding, and website setup. Each line item should tie to a unit price or a fixed fee.
Quote packaging per unit
Price permits and insurance
Separate booth setup from online launch
Cut Early Cash
Keep the first launch narrow. Start with the packaging format that fits the channel, and delay distillation unless essential oil is in the first sales plan. That keeps cash tied to inventory and compliance, not idle equipment. One clean format per channel usually beats a wide, messy launch.
Delay distillation if oil waits
Buy only launch quantities
Match labels to each format
Cash Timing
Cash timing is uneven: plan for 3 months for essential oil, 6 months for culinary, 5 months for floral bundles, and 4 months for sachets and craft or event dried lavender. Some launch costs hit long before cash comes back, so working capital has to cover the gap.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Lean, Base, and Full show how land mix, processing gear, and working capital move startup cash needs from a small dried-flower test to a larger farm with ownership and distillation.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario
Lean LaunchLowest cash risk
Base LaunchBalanced launch
Full LaunchProcessing-heavy
Launch model
Lease a small plot, dry flowers only, and skip distillation and heavy storage to keep cash needs low.
Run the researched mix on 2 leased hectares, with one July harvest and 3 to 6 month sales cycles before cash comes in.
Scale into larger acreage with more drying space, stronger storage, and optional distillation, while booking owned land separately at $25,000 per hectare.
Typical setup
Hand tools, basic drying racks, simple packaging, and tight working capital.
Two leased hectares at $250 per hectare per month, a $6,000 first-year lease, five product lines, 50% yield loss, and harvest in model month 7.
Use more cultivated hectares, add storage and processing capacity, and treat the owned land share separately from leased acres.
Cost drivers
Lease rent
drying racks
hand tools
starter labor
packaging
2-hectare lease
irrigation
processing gear
packaging
wages
Expanded acreage
owned land
distillation still
storage
labor
Planning rangeCAPEX only
$200,000 - $300,000Lower cash need
$350,000 - $450,000Model-based
Upper six figuresHigher capital need
Best fit
Best for hobby-to-commercial testing and founders proving dried-flower demand on leased land.
Best for a diversified small farm that wants the researched five-line mix and a clear path to break-even.
Best for a larger commercial operation that can fund more drying space, storage, and optional distillation.
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Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions for modeling, not exact vendor quotes or loan terms.
Start with the land you can fund and manage through harvest The researched model starts at 2 cultivated hectares in the first operating year, then grows to 3 hectares in Year 2 and 4 hectares in Year 3 That scale lets the farm test five product lines without buying land upfront, since Year 1 assumes 00% owned land
In this model, harvest occurs in model month 7 for all five product lines Cash still may lag because sales cycles run 3 months for essential oil, 4 months for sachets and craft or event dried lavender, 5 months for floral bundles, and 6 months for culinary lavender Fund the gap before counting collections as available cash
No, distillation is optional The model allocates 400% of land to essential oil, but the other 600% supports dried culinary lavender, floral bundles, sachets, and craft or event dried lavender If you skip oil at launch, your startup budget can focus more on drying racks, storage, packaging, market setup, and food-safe handling
Separate land access from land purchase The first operating year assumes leased land at $250 per hectare per month, so 2 hectares cost $500 monthly or $6,000 for the year Land purchase is excluded from the base startup budget because owned land share is 00% in Year 1, with later purchase assumptions at $25,000 per hectare
Working capital should cover the months before harvest and the collection lag after sales Use the model’s month 7 harvest, 3 to 6 month sales cycles, $500 monthly land lease, 50% yield loss, and 130% Year 1 direct cost rate as starting inputs The exact amount depends on payroll, packaging, insurance, repairs, and market channel timing
About the author
Ryan Spencer
First-Time Founder Guide Writer
Ryan Spencer writes for Financial Models Lab, where he focuses on launch budget planning and simple launch planning for first-time founders. He helps readers estimate startup needs before opening a physical location, breaking down business costs in clear, practical language. His work is built for people who want a realistic view of what it really takes to open a business, so they can plan with more confidence and fewer surprises.
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