{"id":387,"date":"2026-04-21T02:39:47","date_gmt":"2026-04-21T02:39:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/balerhay.com\/?p=387"},"modified":"2026-04-21T02:39:47","modified_gmt":"2026-04-21T02:39:47","slug":"hay-quality-grades-primer-guide","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/balerhay.com\/es\/application\/hay-quality-grades-primer-guide\/","title":{"rendered":"What are hay quality grades? Prime, Premium, Good, Fair, and Utility explained"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Understanding Hay Quality Grades: Prime, Premium, Good, Fair, Utility<\/h2>\n

Not all hay is created equal \u2014 and the price difference between top-grade and bottom-grade hay in the same year can easily exceed 3\u00d7. For dairy producers buying hay by the ton, for exporters shipping containers overseas, and for beef operations sourcing winter feed, knowing how to read hay quality grades<\/strong> is the difference between getting a fair deal and overpaying for mediocre forage. This guide walks through the grading system used across North America, how each grade is defined, and how field practices determine which grade a specific bale qualifies for.<\/p>\n

What Are Hay Quality Grades?<\/h2>\n

A hay grade is a standardized quality classification based on measurable nutritional properties: crude protein (CP), acid detergent fiber (ADF), neutral detergent fiber (NDF), total digestible nutrients (TDN), and calculated indices like Relative Feed Value (RFV) or Relative Forage Quality (RFQ). Unlike subjective judgments (“that looks like good hay”), grades are assigned by sending a sample to a forage testing lab and comparing results against published USDA hay grade standards<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

Grades matter because different livestock classes have different nutritional requirements. A lactating dairy cow needs Prime or Premium hay to maintain milk production economically; a dry beef cow can thrive on Good grade hay; a maintenance horse may do fine on Fair. Matching grade to class avoids both nutritional shortfalls (feeding too-low grade) and wasted money (feeding too-high grade where it’s not needed).<\/p>\n

The Five Standard Grades<\/h2>\n

The grading scale used across most of North America recognizes five quality tiers. Each is defined by cut-off values for the key nutritional parameters:<\/p>\n

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PRIME \u2014 The Top Tier<\/p>\n

RFV:<\/strong> >151 \u00a0|\u00a0 CP:<\/strong> >19% \u00a0|\u00a0 ADF:<\/strong> <31% \u00a0|\u00a0 NDF:<\/strong> <40%<\/p>\n

Typically first-cut early-bud alfalfa or second-cut high-quality mixed hay, harvested at optimal moisture (16\u201318%) with minimal weather damage. Destination: high-producing dairy cows, lactating horses, show animals.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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PREMIUM<\/p>\n

RFV:<\/strong> 125\u2013150 \u00a0|\u00a0 CP:<\/strong> 17\u201319% \u00a0|\u00a0 ADF:<\/strong> 31\u201335% \u00a0|\u00a0 NDF:<\/strong> 40\u201346%<\/p>\n

Late-bud or early-bloom alfalfa, high-quality grass hay, or mixed hay with strong alfalfa content. The workhorse grade for dairy and equine markets. Cost-effective compared to Prime with only marginal nutritional drop-off.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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GOOD<\/p>\n

RFV:<\/strong> 103\u2013124 \u00a0|\u00a0 CP:<\/strong> 14\u201316% \u00a0|\u00a0 ADF:<\/strong> 36\u201340% \u00a0|\u00a0 NDF:<\/strong> 47\u201353%<\/p>\n

Mid-bloom alfalfa or quality grass hay. Suitable for dry cows, growing heifers, beef cattle, and maintenance horses. The sweet spot for beef operations balancing nutrition against cost.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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FAIR<\/p>\n

RFV:<\/strong> 87\u2013102 \u00a0|\u00a0 CP:<\/strong> 11\u201313% \u00a0|\u00a0 ADF:<\/strong> 41\u201342% \u00a0|\u00a0 NDF:<\/strong> 54\u201360%<\/p>\n

Full-bloom alfalfa, over-mature grass hay, or weather-damaged premium hay. Used for maintenance feeding of mature beef cattle with protein supplementation. Price 40\u201355% below Premium.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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UTILITY \u2014 Bottom Tier<\/p>\n

RFV:<\/strong> <86 \u00a0|\u00a0 CP:<\/strong> <11% \u00a0|\u00a0 ADF:<\/strong> >42% \u00a0|\u00a0 NDF:<\/strong> >60%<\/p>\n

Over-mature, rain-damaged, or poorly-cured hay. Requires significant supplementation. Suitable only for maintenance of mature dry cows or as bedding. Price typically 60\u201375% below Premium.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

How RFV and RFQ Work<\/h2>\n

Relative Feed Value (RFV relative feed value<\/strong>) is the calculated index that combines ADF and NDF measurements into a single quality number. Full-bloom alfalfa with ADF of 41% and NDF of 53% scores RFV 100 \u2014 the reference benchmark. Higher numbers mean higher quality; lower numbers mean lower quality. The beauty of RFV is that it reduces multiple lab measurements to a single comparable figure, making grade assignment straightforward.<\/p>\n

RFQ (Relative Forage Quality) is the newer, more accurate index that factors in fiber digestibility in addition to fiber quantity. For hay going to high-producing dairy cows, RFQ is the preferred metric because it better predicts actual milk response. For general-purpose grading, RFV remains widely used because it’s simpler and has decades of industry reference data behind it.<\/p>\n

How Grade Affects Price<\/h2>\n

In the 2026 North American market, typical price relationships between grades (large round bale basis, delivered farm-to-farm) run approximately:<\/p>\n