{"id":938,"date":"2026-05-18T07:21:55","date_gmt":"2026-05-18T07:21:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/foragebaler.com\/?p=938"},"modified":"2026-05-18T07:21:55","modified_gmt":"2026-05-18T07:21:55","slug":"hay-market-channels-selling-hay-guide","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/foragebaler.com\/es\/hay-market-channels-selling-hay-guide\/","title":{"rendered":"C\u00f3mo vender heno: canales de mercado, precios y relaciones con los compradores."},"content":{"rendered":"
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Hay Marketing Guide<\/span><\/p>\n

C\u00f3mo vender heno: canales de mercado, precios y relaciones con los compradores.<\/h1>\n

Most hay producers make production decisions carefully and marketing decisions haphazardly \u2014 accepting the first offer, selling to whoever calls first, and pricing based on what a neighbor received last season. Better marketing doesn’t require a large operation or a sales background. It requires knowing where each channel fits, what each buyer type values, and how to position your specific hay quality in the channel where it commands the highest return.<\/p>\n

Compare Market Channels<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n

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The Hay Market Landscape: Four Channels, Four Economics<\/h2>\n

Every bale of hay you produce can flow through one of four main channels: direct-to-consumer retail, commercial hay elevator or broker, contracted delivery to a specific farm or feedlot, or export through an international hay trading company. Each channel has a different price point, a different volume requirement, a different reliability profile, and a different relationship demand. Most commercial producers use a combination of two or three channels rather than committing exclusively to one.<\/p>\n

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Direct Retail<\/div>\n
Highest $\/ton. Highest relationship demand. Best for small-volume premium quality.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Elevator \/ Broker<\/div>\n
Mid price. High volume capacity. Best for commercial volume without marketing overhead.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Contract<\/div>\n
Stable price. Committed volume. Best for operations valuing predictability over maximum price.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Export<\/div>\n
High price potential. Very high quality spec. Pacific Coast and specific regions only.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Direct-to-Consumer Sales: The Highest-Margin Channel<\/h2>\n

\"commercial<\/p>\n

Selling hay directly to the end-user who feeds it \u2014 horse owners, small farm operators, hobby livestock keepers \u2014 eliminates every intermediary margin between production and consumption. The direct retail price for Premium alfalfa or horse-quality grass hay in most U.S. regions is 30\u201360% above the elevator wholesale price for the same hay. This is the channel that makes the quality investment financially rational: a hay producer who consistently achieves Supreme-grade alfalfa and sells it directly to horse owners captures the full quality premium that would be partially absorbed by elevator margins in the wholesale channel.<\/p>\n

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Who buys direct and what they want<\/div>\n

Horse owners buying 10\u201350 bales at a time. Small goat, sheep, and hobby farm operators. Organic livestock producers who need documentation of management practices. Rabbit and small-animal owners who want clean, low-dust hay. All these buyers typically prioritize quality over price to a greater degree than commercial livestock operations \u2014 they want to see the hay before buying, they want consistency batch-to-batch, and they will pay a premium for a producer they trust.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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Building a direct retail customer base<\/div>\n

Direct retail customers are acquired through local visibility, not price advertising. Effective approaches: a farm sign on a well-traveled road; a listing on hay-finder websites and Facebook Marketplace; word-of-mouth from satisfied customers; contact with local boarding stables and 4-H programs; and presence at local feed stores where customers ask for referrals. One well-connected boarding stable manager who recommends your hay can generate 15\u201325 direct accounts. Retain direct customers through consistent quality and reliable availability.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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Limitations of the direct channel<\/div>\n

Direct retail moves hay slowly relative to elevator volume. A typical direct retail customer buys 20\u201350 bales per visit, 2\u20134 times per year. On a 2,000-bale annual production, direct retail might absorb 400\u2013600 bales to 20\u201330 accounts \u2014 the remaining 1,400\u20131,600 bales still need a volume channel. Relying exclusively on direct retail for a commercial operation creates cash flow inconsistency and occasional storage overflow.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n

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Hay Elevators and Brokers: Volume Without Relationship Management<\/h2>\n

A hay elevator or broker buys hay from producers and resells it to buyers \u2014 large dairies, feedlots, retail distributors, or exporters. The elevator’s value proposition to the producer is simple: they will buy your entire load, pay you quickly (typically net 30), and handle the downstream logistics and buyer relationships. The cost: they buy at wholesale (below what the end-user pays) and their margin is the difference between their purchase price and their resale price.<\/p>\n

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How elevators grade<\/div>\n
Elevators use forage testing (ADF, NDF, RFV, moisture, ash) to assign grade \u2014 Supreme, Premium, Good, Fair. The test result determines the price offered for that truckload. Bring your own forage test from a recent baling lot to any elevator negotiation. Elevators sometimes discount the grade for loads without independent test verification, paying for Good-grade hay that tests at Premium by withholding the premium until their own test confirms it. Having your test before going to market costs $15\u2013$25 and can be worth $10\u2013$30\/ton at the elevator scale.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Elevator requirements<\/div>\n
Commercial elevators have minimum load sizes (typically one truck = 20\u201324 large square bales or 30\u201340 round bales). Moisture requirements are strict \u2014 most elevators require below 15% for stored hay and below 18% for immediate forwarding. Ash content above 12% is typically discounted or rejected. Foreign material (soil clods, wire, plastic fragments) causes rejection regardless of nutritional values. Know the specific elevator’s requirements before delivering.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Using multiple elevators<\/div>\n
Develop relationships with 2\u20133 elevators in your region rather than using one exclusively. Different elevators have different primary buyers and different seasonal demand \u2014 one elevator may be paying a premium for dairy-spec alfalfa in February while another is paying better for horse hay in May. Maintaining multiple options allows you to direct each load to the best-paying outlet at the time of sale.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n

The complete guide to elevator grading standards \u2014 what each grade requires for ADF, NDF, CP, moisture, and ash values \u2014 and the price premium schedule that translates grades into dollars is in the hay market pricing and elevator grading guide<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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Contract Sales: Trading Price Ceiling for Stability<\/h2>\n

\"round<\/p>\n

A contract sale commits a specific volume of hay at a specific price for a defined period \u2014 typically one cutting, one season, or one year. The dairy, feedlot, or large livestock operation that buys on contract gets price certainty for their feed budget. The producer gets guaranteed revenue regardless of whether the spot market rises or falls. The tradeoff: if the spot market rises significantly above the contract price after signing, you are committed to the contract price. If the spot market falls, the contract protects you.<\/p>\n

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Contract terms to understand before signing<\/div>\n