Mango Farming Startup Costs: Plan A 10-Hectare Orchard Budget
Mango Farming Bundle
Using the researched first-year assumptions, land access alone ranges from $18,000 for leasing all 10 hectares for 12 months to $200,000 if all 10 hectares are purchased at $20,000 per hectare The base model sits between those points: 2 owned hectares cost $40,000, while 8 leased hectares cost $1,200 per month, or $14,400 in the first year That makes the modeled first-year land funding need $54,400 before irrigation, trees, site work, equipment, permits, insurance, and operating cash Working capital for non-bearing or low-yield years can be as important as upfront CAPEX because harvest activity is modeled only in months 5 through 8 and Year 1 yield loss is 80%
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates the upfront capitalized assets for a mango farm, not ongoing operating costs.
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Use case limits This excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, operating losses, and post-launch insurance premiums. Lease cash sits outside pure CAPEX unless you choose to fund it as startup financing.
Where are startup costs shown in Mango Farming?
This Mango Farming Financial Model TemplateCAPEX tab lists startup costs. Review categories, timing, amounts, and depreciation/amortization assumptions.
Model screenshot highlights
CAPEX and startup tabs
Land and lease schedules
Harvest calendar and ramp-up
COGS percentages and scenarios
10 hectares, Year 1
80% Year 1 yield loss
Harvest months 5-8
Mango Farming Financial Model
5-Year Financial Projections
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How do you fund a mango farm startup?
Fund Mango Farming with staged capital and a clear use-of-funds plan. Lenders and investors will want acreage, land ownership, lease terms, planting schedule, establishment period, yield ramp-up, harvest labor, packing, sales channels, and cash runway. Split the raise into CAPEX, pre-opening expenses, seasonal working capital, and debt service. Show land ownership rising from 200% in Year 1 to 350% in Year 5 and 500% by the final model year.
What funders need
10 hectares at start
15 hectares in Year 2
25 hectares in Year 3
100 hectares by final year
How to split funding
CAPEX for land and trees
Pre-opening setup costs
Seasonal working capital for labor
Debt service from farm cash flow
How much does it cost to start a mango farm per acre?
For Mango Farming, land cost starts at about $729 per leased acre per year or $8,094 per owned acre; the modeled 10 hectares equals about 24.7 acres, so don’t use one universal startup cost. The base case owns 2 hectares and leases 8 hectares, putting first-year land outlay at $54,400 before orchard setup; see What Is The Current Growth Rate Of Mango Farming Business? for growth context.
Land cost math
Owned land: $20,000/hectare
Leased land: $150/hectare/month
Owned cost: about $8,094/acre
Lease cost: about $729/acre/year
Setup options
Lease-only: lowest first-year cash need
Mixed model: $40,000 purchase plus $14,400 lease
Owned-land model: highest upfront capital
Exclude irrigation, trees, equipment, and labor
What are the biggest startup costs for a mango farm?
The biggest startup cost in Mango Farming is land, especially if you buy it: at $20,000 per owned hectare, buying 10 hectares costs $200,000, while leasing the same land at $150 a month per hectare is $18,000 for Year 1. After that, the next big costs are irrigation, water access, site prep, tree stock, planting density, equipment, and climate-risk protection, and the cash squeeze is real because harvest runs in months 5 through 8.
Land drives the budget
$20,000 per owned hectare
$200,000 for 10 hectares
$150 monthly lease per hectare
$18,000 to lease 10 hectares for 12 months
Orchard setup costs
Check site suitability first
Budget for irrigation and water
Include trees and spacing
Plan for weather protection
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table summarizes mango farm startup assets and the non-CAPEX cash needed through establishment.
Highlighted CAPEX$740,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$745,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,485,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Initial Land Purchase (2 Hectares)
$40,000
Owned land share and hectare price
Yes
Irrigation System Installation
$150,000
Water infrastructure and installation scope
Yes
Farming Equipment (Tractor, Sprayer, Harvester)
$200,000
Machinery mix and farm scale
Yes
Packing Facility & Cold Storage Construction
$300,000
Facility size and build-out standard
Yes
Initial Mango Saplings & Planting Costs
$50,000
Sapling count and planting labor
Yes
Working Capital Through Establishment
$745,000
Month 40 cash trough and pre-breakeven runway
No
Mango Farming Core Five Startup Costs
Land Access And Site Suitability Startup Expense
Land Mix
Year 1 uses 10 cultivated hectares: buy 2 hectares at $20,000 each for $40,000, and lease 8 hectares at $150 per month for $1,200/month. Screen the site for climate zone, soil drainage, slope, access roads, water rights or well access, and distance to packing or buyers before you lock the land deal.
Site Checks
Use leased acres to stay flexible while you test the farm. The cheap mistake is paying for land that has poor drainage, steep slope, weak road access, or weak water access. Here’s the quick filter: if trucks can’t reach it and water isn’t secure, the site is not ready.
Keep It Separate
Do not blend land purchase into orchard CAPEX unless you label it separately. Land is a balance sheet asset, while orchard setup is a production cost, and mixing them distorts comparisons. Keep the $40,000 purchase line distinct from the $1,200/month lease so payback math stays clean.
Water and Access
Water rights or a reliable well matter as much as price. A cheaper plot with weak water access, bad drainage, or a long haul to buyers can cost more in lost yield and transport than the land savings, so the site score should be based on farmability, not just acreage.
Site Preparation And Irrigation Startup Expense
Water Base
This is core capital spending (CAPEX): clearing, grading, drainage, soil amendments, irrigation design, pumps, wells or water hookups, filters, fertigation, fencing, and windbreaks. For mango orchards, water access and drought risk can decide viability, so keep this line separate from trees and land. Size it to 10 hectares in Year 1, 15 in Year 2, and 25 in Year 3.
Build It Out
Use per-hectare quotes for clearing, grading, drainage, and irrigation hardware. Add separate quotes for pumps, well drilling or water hookups, filters, fertigation gear, fencing, and windbreaks. No vendor cost is given here, so the first budget should stay a placeholder until supplier quotes are in hand.
Phase The Spend
Build only the water system needed for the first 10 hectares, then add capacity as the farm expands. That keeps cash tied to planted acres, not spare pipe and pumps. If you delay water work, planting can slip and the cash runway gets tighter fast.
Quote pumps and wells first
Match flow to acreage
Do not bundle tree costs
Water Before Planting
Finish irrigation before planting. If the site cannot support the first 10 hectares, do not count the 15 and 25 hectare buildout in the schedule yet, because the orchard can’t run on land alone.
Mango Trees And Planting Startup Expense
Planting Scope
Grafted trees, not seed-grown stock, drive this startup cost. Budget for cultivar choice, planting density, stakes, mulch, soil amendments, planting labor, replacement trees, and an establishment contingency. Tree count and nursery pricing need separate validation, and you should not model mature output in year one.
Cost Build
This cost starts with the number of trees, then multiplies by nursery quote, plus planting labor, stakes, mulch, and replacements. Use site-specific counts for each hectare, then add a buffer for losses and replanting. It sits inside orchard startup CAPEX, but it stays separate from land and irrigation so your budget stays clean.
Yield Context
Use the ramp only as planning context: premium grade moves from 700 in Year 1 to 3,150 in Year 5, while standard grade rises from 800 to 3,600. That supports land allocation for 350% premium grade, 400% standard grade, 100% curated boxes, 100% dried mangoes, and 50% puree use.
Keep It Lean
Reduce waste by matching planting density to water access, slope, and soil drainage before you buy trees. Get two nursery quotes, price replacement stock up front, and add a small contingency for dead trees and rework. The cheap mistake is overplanting early and paying twice to fix spacing later.
Farm Equipment And Physical Assets Startup Expense
Core Gear
This line covers a tractor or utility vehicle, mower, sprayer, pruning tools, ladders or platforms, harvest bins, basic storage, cold storage access, small tools, and a maintenance setup. Keep owned equipment separate from rented or contracted work, so the startup budget stays clean and comparisons stay honest.
How To Size It
Price it from quotes and unit counts: number of machines, bin capacity, storage space, and months of cold access. Size the first buy for 10 hectares in Year 1, not the later 55 hectares or 100 hectares. Buying for final-year scale too early locks up cash before harvest revenue starts.
Spend Less Smart
Own the gear you use every week, rent peak-load equipment, and contract specialty work when it is rare. That keeps depreciation clear of underused assets and cuts repair risk. One clean rule: buy for the acreage you can farm this season, then add only when planted area and work volume truly rise.
Ready Before Harvest
Harvest runs in months 5 through 8, so bins, tools, labor scheduling, and storage must be ready before fruit starts moving. Cold storage access matters most in that window, because delays hit quality fast. If bin count or storage is short, harvest labor stalls and fruit backs up.
Pre-Opening Readiness And Compliance Startup Expense
Pre-open spend
These costs are mostly pre-opening expenses or working capital, unless they create depreciable infrastructure. Include entity formation, farm permits where applicable, insurance, accounting, consultant support, starter fertilizer, pest control, safety supplies, pruning and irrigation-check labor, and marketing setup for future fruit sales. Keep them separate from orchard CAPEX so startup comparisons stay clean.
Cost inputs
Build this line from quotes and months of coverage. The inputs are permit fees, policy premiums, consultant hours, labor days, and starter quantities of fertilizer, pest control, and safety gear. If an item creates a lasting asset, like a permanent water or safety structure, move it to CAPEX instead of expense.
Use permit and insurance quotes.
Count labor days, not guesses.
Separate assets from consumables.
Keep it lean
Pay for the minimum support needed to open compliant and ready. Use one agronomist review, not open-ended retainers, and buy only the input volume needed for the first cycle. Don’t bury fixed overhead here. That mistake hides true cash burn before harvest starts.
Scope consultant hours tightly.
Buy only first-cycle inputs.
Keep overhead out of startup.
Cash gap
Plan cash for the 8 months with no harvest, since modeled harvest runs only months 5 through 8. In Year 1, direct production labor runs at 80% of revenue and packaging at 40%, so working capital matters as much as launch spend. If payroll or packout is underfunded, the farm can slip before sales start.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Startup cost scenarios
Land control drives mango farm startup cost: leasing keeps cash light, mixed ownership balances control and spend, and full ownership pushes the biggest upfront check.
Lease, mixed ownership, and full ownership cost comparison.
Scenario
Lean LaunchLowest cash need
Base LaunchBalanced capital mix
Full LaunchHighest upfront spend
Launch model
Use leased land first to keep upfront cash low.
Mix owned land with leases to split cash use and control.
Buy all land up front and build from an owned site.
Typical setup
Lease 10 hectares at $150 per hectare per month and delay heavy orchard buildout.
Buy 2 hectares and lease the rest of a 10-hectare farm.
Buy 10 hectares at $20,000 per hectare before site work and buildout.
Cost drivers
Land lease
orchard planting
basic irrigation
farm office setup
Land purchase
land lease
irrigation
saplings
planting costs
Land purchase
irrigation system
farm equipment
packing storage
processing equipment
Planning rangeCAPEX only
$18,000Cash-light start
$54,400Mixed funding
$200,000+Capital heavy
Best fit
Fits owners testing the farm with the least upfront cash and limited land commitment.
Fits owners who want some land on the balance sheet but still want to limit first-year cash strain.
Fits buyers with strong capital who want full land control and a larger buildout from day one.
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Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact quotes or vendor bids.
In the first-year model, land funding starts at $54,400 for the mixed setup That comes from buying 2 hectares at $20,000 each, or $40,000, and leasing 8 hectares at $150 per hectare per month, or $14,400 for 12 months This excludes irrigation, trees, equipment, permits, insurance, and working capital
The model shows harvest activity in months 5 through 8, but that should not be read as mature orchard cash flow The yield ramp is still a major planning issue: premium grade volume rises from 700 in Year 1 to 3,150 in Year 5, and standard grade rises from 800 to 3,600 Fund the early ramp-up period
You should budget insurance as part of working capital, especially where storms, drought, pests, or freeze events can hit cash flow The model carries an 80% yield loss in Year 1, improving to 60% by Year 5 That loss assumption is a reminder to fund recovery costs, not just planting costs
The best strategy depends on cash, water rights, and how permanent the orchard plan is Leasing all 10 hectares at $150 per hectare per month costs $18,000 for 12 months, while buying all 10 hectares at $20,000 each costs $200,000 The modeled base case splits the difference with 200% owned land
The provided model does not specify tree spacing or tree count, so don’t price nursery stock from a guessed per-acre number Start with the known land plan: 10 hectares in Year 1, growing to 15 hectares in Year 2 and 25 hectares in Year 3 Then add tree density, cultivar, and replacement-rate assumptions from an agronomist or nursery quote
About the author
Marcus Cole
Business Operations Writer
Marcus Cole is a business operations writer for Financial Models Lab who researches how small businesses launch, operate, and earn money. He focuses on first-year business costs and simple business projections, helping local business owners move from a side project to a real business. His work guides readers from an idea to a basic business plan.
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