{"id":433,"date":"2026-04-21T05:15:30","date_gmt":"2026-04-21T05:15:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/balerhay.com\/?p=433"},"modified":"2026-04-21T05:23:03","modified_gmt":"2026-04-21T05:23:03","slug":"small-farm-hay-equipment-package-guide","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/balerhay.com\/pt\/application\/small-farm-hay-equipment-package-guide\/","title":{"rendered":"What hay equipment do you need for a small farm? Starter package for under 100 acres"},"content":{"rendered":"
For farms managing 20 to 100 acres of hay, equipment choices differ dramatically from commercial-scale operations. Full-size haying equipment is overkill \u2014 expensive, power-hungry, and matched to acreage you don’t have. At the other extreme, consumer-grade garden-tractor implements are too flimsy for real hay production. The sweet spot is purpose-built small farm hay equipment<\/strong> \u2014 compact, matched to 35\u201375 HP tractors, durable enough for annual use, affordable enough to pencil out on small-acreage economics. This guide walks through the three practical equipment tiers for small-farm hay production and what each costs to put together.<\/p>\n Every hay production operation needs 4 core equipment functions:<\/p>\n Additional functions \u2014 hay handling (loader, wagon), storage (barn, tarp), and optional conditioning \u2014 complete the workflow. For small farms, the budget usually supports minimum-viable coverage of the four core functions, with added items phased in over multiple seasons.<\/p>\n Entry Tier \u2014 The Minimum-Viable Hay Kit<\/p>\n Approach: buy used, buy older reliable models, accept longer cycle times and manual labor. Suitable for hobby farm baler<\/strong> operations producing 500\u20131,200 bales per year for own-use or small-scale direct sale. Not suitable for commercial haymaking above 50 acres.<\/p>\n Working Tier \u2014 Efficient Mid-Range Kit<\/p>\n This is the compact hay equipment<\/strong> sweet spot. The disc mower cuts faster than sickle-bar, rotary rake handles variable windrows better than wheel rake, and compact round balers produce storable 4×5 bales (300\u2013500 kg each) that can be handled with a loader tractor. Production capacity: 1,500\u20134,000 bales per year. Suitable for small commercial sales and on-farm livestock feeding.<\/p>\n Premium Tier \u2014 Efficient, Capable, Long-Lasting<\/p>\n Premium tier equipment handles 100 acres comfortably, sometimes allows small acreage haying<\/strong> with some custom-work income. Equipment life 15\u201320+ years with proper maintenance. Appropriate for serious hobby farms, small commercial operations, and producers who want best-quality tools despite small acreage.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n For small-farm budgets, the new-vs-used decision matters most for each category:<\/p>\n A common mistake in small-farm equipment selection is mismatching tractor PTO capacity to implement requirements. Typical PTO horsepower requirements:<\/p>\n For a complete small-farm haying setup, a 55\u201365 HP PTO tractor covers all the core implements with margin. Under-powered tractors (e.g., attempting 4×5 round baling with a 35 HP tractor) produces soft-core bales, slow operation, driveline stress, and premature baler failures. Proper PTO shafts matched to the driveline rating are critical \u2014 an undersized PTO shaft is the fastest way to fail components. See our other product series<\/a> for properly-rated PTO shafts sized for small-farm implements.<\/p>\n For the smallest operations (under 30 acres), a common practical approach is: own mower, rake, and tractor; hire out the baling to a custom operator. This works because: (1) mowing and raking are time-flexible operations that can be done on your own schedule, while (2) baling is time-critical and equipment-intensive. Custom baling rates in 2026 run $15\u201325 per round bale, meaning a 30-acre farm producing 200 bales pays $3,000\u20135,000 annually for custom baling \u2014 often less than the annualized cost of owning a baler.<\/p>\n This approach works well until acreage grows past 60\u201380 acres, at which point custom baling costs justify owning a baler.<\/p>\n A note on mower selection: finish mowers, flail mowers, and brush-hog rotary mowers are optimized for landscape or pasture-clip applications, not for haymaking. True hay mowing requires a dedicated sickle-bar or disc mower that leaves the cut crop in an organized swath for curing. For small farms with mixed uses (some mowing for landscape, some for hay), two mowers is usually the right answer \u2014 a flail or rotary mower for landscape\/pasture work, and a dedicated sickle-bar or small disc mower for hay. Browse our lawn mower series<\/a> for landscape and pasture-clip mower options that complement a dedicated hay-cutting mower.<\/p>\n For a new small-farm operation, the rational equipment acquisition order:<\/p>\n This phased approach spreads capital investment across seasons, lets you learn which equipment wears well in your conditions, and avoids the classic mistake of buying everything new at once and being stuck with mismatched components or underutilized capacity.<\/p>\n Most small farm hay equipment<\/strong> purchases happen in the used market. A disciplined inspection process saves expensive mistakes:<\/p>\n New haymakers commonly make these mistakes in their first season:<\/p>\n Recommended Companion Product<\/p>\n PTO Shaft for Baler<\/strong> \u2014 Properly-sized PTO shafts (Cat 1, Cat 2, Cat 3 series) with slip-clutch protection for small-farm balers, mowers, and rakes. Matched length and spline configuration for major implement brands. CE\/ASAE compliant.<\/p>\n<\/div>\nThe Basic Haying Workflow<\/h2>\n
\n
Tier 1: Starter Package (20\u201340 acres, $15,000\u201325,000 used)<\/h2>\n
\n
Tier 2: Working Farm Package (40\u201375 acres, $35,000\u201355,000)<\/h2>\n
\n
Tier 3: Premium Small-Farm Package (50\u2013100 acres, $65,000\u2013100,000)<\/h2>\n
\n
<\/p>\nBudget Tradeoffs: New vs Used<\/h2>\n
\n
PTO and Power Matching<\/h2>\n
\n
The Cut-Skip Option<\/h2>\n
Lawn Mower vs Sickle\/Disc Mower<\/h2>\n
Year-One Priority List<\/h2>\n
\n
Used Equipment: What to Inspect Before Buying<\/h2>\n
\n
Starter-Year Mistakes to Avoid<\/h2>\n
\n