How Much It Costs To Start A 10-Hectare Watermelon Farm

Watermelon Farming Startup Costs
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Description

For the modeled 10-hectare US watermelon farm, the startup funding need starts with land access, irrigation, equipment, crop setup, harvest readiness, and working capital The researched first-year assumptions include 20% owned land, which equals 2 hectares at $20,000 per hectare, or $40,000 of land purchase CAPEX, plus 8 leased hectares at $200 per hectare per month, or $1,600 per month CAPEX is separate from operating cash: direct production inputs are modeled at 8% of revenue, logistics at 6%, and direct sales support at 3% With first-year projected sales of about $485,000 after a 7% yield loss, those three operating buckets equal roughly $82,500 before labor, repairs, insurance, debt service, and owner draw



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets for a watermelon farm, including owned land and durable field, water, storage, and handling assets only.

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Exclusions Excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, lease payments, crop insurance premiums, fertilizer, fuel, utilities, and other operating costs. Use this for capitalized startup assets only.



Where do CAPEX and cash timing show up in Watermelon Farming?

The Watermelon Farming Financial Model Template CAPEX tab shows startup costs, timing, amounts, and depreciation or amortization; review assumptions. CAPEX and working capital are separate funding lines, with launch tied to the first harvest in month 7.

Key screenshot highlights

  • 10 hectares, Year 1
  • 15 hectares, Year 2
  • 20 hectares, Year 3
  • 20% owned land Year 1
  • $20,000 per hectare
  • $200 monthly lease
  • 7% yield loss
  • Two sales cycles
  • First harvest in month 7
Watermelon Farming Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditures and purchase timing, letting the user customize equipment, land improvements and investment schedules for accurate funding and depreciation planning.


What are the biggest costs in starting a watermelon farm?


The biggest startup costs in Watermelon Farming are land, irrigation, and field setup, not seed. With a 10-hectare plan and 20% ownership, land buy-in is 2 hectares × $20,000 = $40,000, while the other 8 hectares at $200 per hectare per month add $1,600/month. After that, the cash goes into tractor access, mulch, drip systems, harvest bins, pallets, trailers, packing space, and freight planning, because direct production inputs are only 8% of revenue and logistics is another 6%.

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Biggest upfront costs

  • $40,000 for 2 owned hectares
  • $1,600/month to lease 8 hectares
  • Pay for irrigation before harvest
  • Prep soil and tractor access early
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Operating costs to plan

  • Budget mulch and drip systems
  • Seed cost is not the main issue
  • 8% of revenue goes to inputs
  • 6% of revenue goes to logistics

What are the hidden costs of starting a watermelon farm?


The hidden costs of Watermelon Farming are mostly working capital and pre-opening expenses, not durable CAPEX: labor before revenue, fuel, repairs, scouting, crop protection, packaging, freight, food safety compliance, insurance, permit work, lease deposits, professional fees, and slow buyer payments. See How Much Does The Owner Of Watermelon Farming Typically Make? for the revenue side, but the cash gap matters more here: the crop has no harvest in months 1 through 6, and the first cash events start in month 7. With a 7% modeled yield loss, working capital should cover about 8% direct inputs, 6% logistics, and 3% sales support, or roughly $82,500 against about $485,000 in first-year sales.

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Pre-opening costs

  • Labor starts before revenue.
  • Fuel, repairs, and scouting hit cash.
  • Crop protection and packaging add up.
  • Permits, insurance, and legal fees come first.
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Working capital gap

  • No harvest in months 1-6.
  • First cash events begin in month 7.
  • 7% yield loss lowers cash collected.
  • Buyer payment delays stretch the gap.

How do you plan funding for a watermelon farm?


Plan funding around land first: either lease all 10 hectares for $2,000/month or use a mixed setup with $40,000 of purchased land plus $1,600/month lease. Build CAPEX, pre-opening costs, working capital, and a cash buffer before any debt service or owner draw; the first-year sales target is about $485,000, but that is a planning output, not day-one cash. Map revenue by variety, land allocation, 2 sales cycles, and 7% yield loss so harvest timing matches funding needs.

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Land setup first

  • Lease all 10 hectares for $2,000/month
  • Or buy land for $40,000
  • Add $1,600/month lease in mixed access
  • Start with the land cash gap
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Cash plan next

  • Fund CAPEX before draws
  • Cover pre-opening expenses upfront
  • Hold working capital through harvest
  • Include 7% yield loss


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Startup cost summary for watermelon farming covering major launch assets and excluded operating cash needs across low, base, and high cases.

Highlighted CAPEX$760,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$2,077,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$2,837,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Owned Land Purchase (20% of Cultivated Area) $40,000 10 hectares, 20% owned, and land price per hectare Yes
Farming Equipment $350,000 Tractors, planters, and harvesters Yes
Irrigation System Installation $150,000 Drip, pump, and filter setup Yes
Farm Vehicles $120,000 Trucks and ATVs for farm movement Yes
Watermelon Sorting & Grading Machinery $100,000 Post-harvest handling and packing flow Yes
Pre-Breakeven Operating Reserve $2,077,000 Losses before breakeven and seasonal cash timing No

Planning note: Ranges use researched assumptions; row 6 excludes non-CAPEX launch cash and lease.


Watermelon Farming Core Five Startup Costs



Land Access And Field Preparation Startup Expense


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Land Access

For a 10-hectare farm, model land two ways. If you own 2 hectares at $20,000 per hectare, that is $40,000; the other 8 hectares leased at $200 per hectare per month cost $1,600 per month, plus any lease deposit. If you lease all 10 hectares, the reference is $2,000 per month. Keep land purchase out of operating startup since ownership is not required.


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Field Prep

Field prep covers clearing, soil testing, grading, drainage, bed shaping, lime, amendments, and pre-plant work. Price it per hectare before planting. The total depends on soil condition, prior crop, slope, road access, water access, and whether custom field prep is available. This is a startup cash item, not a crop input spread across sales.

  • Test soil before lime.
  • Quote grading by hectare.
  • Ask about custom crews.
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Keep Cash Flexible

Do not buy land just to start. Lease the acres first, then decide later if ownership helps returns. That keeps cash free for drainage and bed prep, which matter more on wet or uneven fields. One clean rule: pay for the field shape you need, not the title you want.


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Site Check

Before you budget, confirm soil condition, prior crop, slope, road access, water access, and whether custom field prep is available. These answers change clearing, drainage, and grading cost fast. A flat, well-drained site with service access usually needs less work than a rough field with poor water access.



Irrigation And Water Infrastructure Startup Expense


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Water Setup

For a 10-hectare planting plan, budget for drip lines, mainlines, pumps, filters, valves, fertigation gear, trenching, installation labor, and spare parts. Treat durable pumps, filters, mainlines, and controls as CAPEX. Put season-only drip tape in first-crop working capital. Confirm a well, surface water rights, power, and enough pressure for even irrigation.


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Cost Build

Build the estimate from quotes for each unit: line length, pump size, filter count, valve count, trenching meters, and spare parts. The operating model already loads direct production inputs at 8% of revenue for seeds, water, fertilizer, and energy, so don’t double count those items in startup CAPEX.

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2-Cycle Fit

The irrigation setup has to support 2 sales cycles per variety, so flow and pressure need to stay steady across both harvest windows. If the farm already has water access and electrical service, the startup bill can stay focused on the field network; if not, water access becomes the first gate.

  • Check well yield and pressure.
  • Verify surface water rights.
  • Price installation labor first.

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Spend Less

Cut waste by using existing water and power, then sizing pumps to actual field pressure instead of guessing high. Phase non-durable drip tape with planting, and compare trenching quotes against custom installation. The fastest mistakes are oversizing pumps and buying season-only supplies too early.



Equipment, Implements, And Machinery Startup Expense


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Equipment Scope

Tractor access, tillage tools, a bed shaper, sprayer, trailer, utility vehicle, hand tools, harvest carts, scales, and field repair tools can turn into a big CAPEX bill fast. For a 10-hectare first year, separate what you buy from what you rent, custom hire, or share. One question changes the budget: hand-loaded harvest or trailer-supported harvest?


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Budget Inputs

Build this cost from units × unit price for owned items, plus rental or custom-work quotes for the rest. Tie the plan to 10 hectares in Year 1, 15 hectares in Year 2, and 20 hectares in Year 3. What this estimate hides: uptime, repairs, and spare parts.

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Cost Control

Use existing equipment first, then compare dealer access, service availability, and custom operator pricing before you buy. Seasonal jobs like spraying, tillage, or hauling are often cheaper to hire than own. Buy only what runs often. Shared or rented gear can protect cash when acreage is still small.


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Depreciation Plan

For purchased assets, set a depreciation schedule from day one so the model reflects wear, not just cash paid. That matters most if you buy for 10 hectares now but plan to scale to 15 and then 20 hectares. Match ownership to use, or the farm carries idle steel.



Seed, Crop Inputs, And First Planting Startup Expense


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What It Covers

Hybrid seed or transplants, plastic mulch, drip tape, fertilizer, crop protection, soil amendments, pollination planning, field scouting, and water or energy belong in first-season working capital or pre-opening crop expenses, not durable capital spending (CAPEX). For the 10-hectare plan, split planting as 50% standard seedless, 20% mini, 15% yellow-flesh, 10% organic seedless, and 5% traditional seeded.


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Budget It Right

Build this cost from variety-level yield and price per kilogram, then test it against the model: direct production inputs are 8% of revenue and first-year yield loss is 7%. On 10 hectares, each crop block needs its own input budget, not one blended average.

  • Use quotes by hectare.
  • Track yield by variety.
  • Track price by variety.
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Keep It Lean

Buy to the planting window, not the full year. Get quotes for seed, mulch, drip tape, and crop protection by hectare, and keep durable tools out of this budget. Field scouting and pollination planning are small line items, but skipping them can raise loss risk and hurt grade.

  • Separate CAPEX from crop spend.
  • Order only planted-area needs.
  • Protect scouting and pollination.

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Variety Map

Map the 10-hectare field into 5.0 hectares standard seedless, 2.0 mini, 1.5 yellow-flesh, 1.0 organic seedless, and 0.5 traditional seeded, then price each block on its own yield and sales rate. That keeps the first planting plan tied to the revenue model.



Harvest, Packing, Labor, And Market Readiness Startup Expense


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Channel Fit

Startup cash changes by channel. Wholesale and distributor sales need bins, pallets, scales, wash or packing space, and freight deposits; roadside and farmers market sales need display gear, cash handling, and local transport. Keep readiness tied to the first sales plan, because each channel uses cash and equipment differently.


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Cost Build

This cost covers seasonal labor, harvest crew setup, trailers, delivery vehicles, wholesale buyer requirements, and any roadside or market gear. Build it from unit counts and quotes: crew days, vehicle use, freight deposits, and packing setup. In the model, logistics and supply chain run at 6% of revenue, plus 3% for direct channel support.

  • Use channel-specific quotes.
  • Count harvest labor days.
  • Price freight deposits early.
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Trim Cash

Cut spend by matching equipment to the first channel, not every channel at once. A wholesale run needs stronger packing and freight prep; roadside sales can start lighter if traffic is proven. The main mistake is buying full retail and wholesale gear before harvest timing is locked, which ties up cash and slows opening.

  • Rent gear before buying.
  • Share transport when possible.
  • Delay extra market fixtures.

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Harvest Timing

Plan cash for the first harvest in month 7. Mini watermelons harvest in months 7 and 9, yellow-flesh in months 8 and 11, and other main varieties in months 7 and 10. That staggered timing drives labor, packing, and delivery needs across the season, so startup readiness has to cover each pickup window.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Acreage, land ownership, irrigation, equipment, and sales channel change startup cash fast. Lean stays light, Base matches the 10-hectare model, and Full adds wholesale-ready scale.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison for watermelon farming
Scenario Lean LaunchLow-capex pilot Base LaunchModeled farm build Full LaunchScale buildout
Launch model Lease most land, hire equipment, and sell locally to keep the first pass light. Follow the model's 10-hectare start with 20% owned land, mixed varieties, and two sales cycles. Expand acreage, own more equipment, and build for wholesale-ready packing and transport.
Typical setup Use a basic drip system, rented machinery, and a narrow crop mix on leased acres. Carry the modeled land mix, standard irrigation, owned equipment, and cold storage. Add stronger irrigation, more owned gear, trailers, bins, and extra contingency.
Cost drivers
  • leased land
  • custom equipment
  • basic drip
  • local sales
  • lean labor
  • 10 hectares
  • 20% owned land
  • mixed varieties
  • 2 sales cycles
  • model labor
  • more acreage
  • owned equipment
  • stronger irrigation
  • packing and trailers
  • contingency
Planning rangeCAPEX only Below $2.1M cash needLowest funding need Around $2.1M cash needModeled funding need Above $2.1M cash needScale-up funding need
Best fit Best for a pilot grower testing demand and field performance before buying more land. Best for a small commercial farm that wants the model's base operating setup. Best for a wholesale-ready operator planning faster scale and more direct control.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not exact vendor quotes.

Frequently Asked Questions

The researched model starts with land access, not a single total quote In Year 1, it assumes 10 cultivated hectares, 20% owned land, and 80% leased land That equals $40,000 for 2 owned hectares at $20,000 per hectare, plus $1,600 per month for 8 leased hectares at $200 per hectare