Farming

How much money can farmers make per acre growing industrial hemp?

Direct answer

Choose fiber, grain, or CBD first—they are planted differently. Fiber: ~5,300 lb straw/ac (up to ~10,000 lb biomass/ac), roughly $300–$1,000/ac when a processor contract exists. Grain: lower density, priced like specialty oilseed with a food buyer. CBD is a separate high-risk lane—not fiber math.

Live data & official sources

Use these links first for current state numbers, regulations, and maps—before relying on national averages in the article below.

Key numbers at a glance

Fiber straw yield

~5,300 lb/ac

Planning figure

Fiber biomass (strong stand)

up to ~10,000 lb/ac

Upper ceiling

Fiber revenue range

$300u2013$1,000/ac

With buyer + haul

Planting

Dense = fiber; wide = grain

Do not mix models

Step 1 — Pick your market before you pick seed

Farmers ask “profit per acre” as if hemp were one crop. It is three different field programs: fiber, grain/seed, and CBD floral. Planting density, harvest, and buyers differ for each.

Fiber hemp

Planting: Dense stand — often ~20–40+ lb seed/ac (variety & row spacing vary). Tall, thin stalks for bast + hurd.

Typical yield: ~5,300 lb straw/ac (common planning figure); up to ~10,000 lb biomass/ac in strong stands.

Revenue per acre: Roughly $300–$1,000/ac fiber value (region, spec, haul, processor)

Income depends on a decorticator within economical haul and a written offtake.

Grain / seed hemp

Planting: Lower population — wider spacing so plants branch and fill grain heads.

Typical yield: Measured in lb grain or bushels per acre (variety & weather dependent).

Revenue per acre: Can align with specialty oilseeds when food-grade contracts exist.

Combine logistics and drying are major cost lines.

CBD / floral (legacy lane)

Planting: Low density, high management — not comparable planting to fiber.

Typical yield: Lb dried flower or extractable cannabinoids — not straw tons.

Revenue per acre: 2019 peaks are not the 2026 industrial baseline.

Do not use for fiber/grain lender models.

Step 2 — Fiber economics

  • Straw yield: ~5,300 lb straw/ac is a widely used planning figure.
  • Biomass yield: up to ~10,000 lb biomass/ac in strong stands.
  • Revenue: commonly budgeted $300–$1,000/ac when fiber is sold to a regional processor under spec.

Step 3 — Grain / seed

Lower seeding rate, grain combine harvest, food/oil buyer. Do not use fiber straw math.

Step 4 — Processing & haul

Fiber value is realized at decortication. Map processors before you plant.

Planning ranges from extension/industry sources; confirm with written processor quotes.

Your next steps

  • Match seeding rate to fiber vs grain before you budget.
  • Get $/ton delivered from a named processor for fiber.
  • Include a no-buyer downside row for lenders.

Common follow-up questions

Why plant fiber denser than grain?

Dense stands produce tall stalks for bast/hurd. Grain needs space for seed heads.

Is $1,000/ac guaranteed?

No it is an upper band with quality, retting, contract, and haul aligned.

Scroll to Top