Farms.com Home   News

Investigate machinery costs for transition plans

Developing the business is a goal for many farm families working through transition. Truly accounting for machinery costs, however, isn’t always considered.

But given the high price of farm equipment, ensuring purchases still support farm profitability is more important than ever.

Machinery value in retirement

For Stuart Person, a Saskatchewan farmer and Edmonton-based national director of primary producers with MNP – a national accounting, tax and advisory firm – younger farmers in transition should consider how machinery factors into the older generation’s retirement.

If parents have all of their wealth invested in the farm, they need to be able to withdraw cash from it. The next generation needs to include this in their cash flow planning.

“The perspective of the younger farmer is if they make a mistake, they have time to recover. Exiting parents don’t have that,” Person says. “There are conflicting goals there where one side is in wealth protection mode, and the other is in expansion mode.”

To lease, or to buy?

Person adds the costs of leasing and buying are also not well understood.  

When you spend $600,000 on a machine, for example, it depreciates rather than increases in value. This is a real cost that needs to be accounted for, as is the required down payment – which permanently ties equity to the machine.

Leasing doesn’t require a down payment. This option helps farmers to work more within their cash flow, particularly given high purchase prices.

The downside? Farmers who lease don’t accumulate any equity in the equipment.

“It’s basically renting,” Person says. “Farmers need to invest more time and effort in getting a better idea of their cost of production.”

John Molenhuis, business analysis and cost of production specialist with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, also says fixed costs like interest and depreciation are not given the same attention as general operating costs, such as fuel.

“You really have to crunch your numbers to make sure it makes sense for you,” he says.

Predictable payments

According to Jeff McGavin, an Ontario equipment dealer and chair of Canada East Equipment Dealers’ Association, more farmers are leasing because the payments are predictable.

Those who do buy generally don’t keep equipment as long, either. Instead, he says machinery is purchased with full warranty, then re-sold at the end of the warranty period.

Crunch the numbers

Person and Molenhuis reiterate the importance of thorough planning. Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario offer information and online calculation tools to help focus the cost of equipment.

“Do proper accrual accounting to know whether you're profitable or not... Know your costs. Take the time and spend a little bit of money for proper financial reporting. That’s critical,” Person says.

Source : fcc

Trending Video

Did Bears Win Thanksgiving, Will Bulls Get Christmas?

Video: Did Bears Win Thanksgiving, Will Bulls Get Christmas?


Did the bears win Thanksgiving (although this week had green on the screen), and will the bulls get Christmas? Bears won thanksgiving thanks to a USDA Nov crop report dud that stalled the bullish grain momentum for a brief period. But a bullish lower yield surprise in the Dec crop report could reignite the rally.
2026 U.S. winter wheat planting is nearly complete at 97% while crop conditions improved by 3 points to 48% good-to-excellent. US corn & soybean harvest is complete.
High corn demand, which is off the chart, and more Chinese soybean demand could support a Christmas rally.
Nasdaq had it’s worst November since 2011.
A U.S. Fed rate cut in December will help fund flow and sentiment.
Bitcoin held a long-term support at 80,000 and that's positive for fund flow and sentiment. It should help stock prices and Ag as we go into December.
Fertilizer prices continue to climb as we look ahead to 2026. Farmers may rely more on the nutrients that they already have in their soils.
South American Weather remains critical as the soybean reproductive stage starts from late Nov to late Feb depending on planting date.
Will a Russia-Ukraine peace deal happen by year-end?
CFTC data as of showed more managed money fund sell-off as of October 14th.