{"id":786,"date":"2026-05-13T03:58:43","date_gmt":"2026-05-13T03:58:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/foragebaler.com\/?p=786"},"modified":"2026-05-13T03:58:43","modified_gmt":"2026-05-13T03:58:43","slug":"hay-market-pricing-elevator-grading-guide","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/foragebaler.com\/tr\/hay-market-pricing-elevator-grading-guide\/","title":{"rendered":"Hay Market Pricing: How Elevators and Buyers Grade Baled Hay and What Each Quality Tier Pays"},"content":{"rendered":"
Hay is priced differently in every market channel \u2014 dairy elevators, horse hay buyers, beef operation direct sales, and export brokers all use different grading criteria and pay different premiums and docks for quality. Understanding how each buyer evaluates your hay before you bale it determines whether you can capture the premium or take the dock.<\/p>\n
Get Hay Production Equipment Info<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n Hay pricing is one of the least transparent commodity markets in U.S. agriculture \u2014 unlike grain, which trades on published futures markets with standardized grades, hay prices are negotiated individually between buyer and seller based on local supply, season, and the specific quality of each lot. Despite this variability, commercial buyers and elevators use consistent evaluation criteria that translate into predictable price adjustments for each quality parameter. Understanding what those criteria are and what they are worth allows producers to make targeted pre-harvest and harvesting decisions that move their hay into a higher-priced market tier.<\/p>\nFive-Tier Hay Pricing Framework: From Premium to Rejected<\/h2>\n
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