Young Farm High-Tech, High-Productivity, and High-Return Farming

Capital Investment Calculator

Run the numbers on any major purchase. See annual ownership cost, payback period, net present value, and whether leasing beats buying.

📊 Purchase price, interest rate, and loan term pulled from your Loan Amortization calculator. Edit any value below to override or to default values.
Decision Summary
Annual Cost
$0
depreciation + DIRTI + fuel
Payback
years to recover net cost
NPV
$0
over useful life
Lease vs Buy
enter lease terms below

Investment Basics

Purchase price Total acquisition cost (include incidentals like delivery and setup)
$
Useful life How many years before this needs replacement or major rebuild
years
Salvage value Estimated trade-in or sale value at end of useful life (typically 20–40% of purchase for equipment, near 0% for tile/buildings)
$

Financing

If you're paying cash, set down payment to 100% and rate to 0. Otherwise enter your loan terms.

Down payment Cash paid up front
%
Interest rate Annual percentage rate on the loan
% APR
Loan term Years to repay the loan
years

Operating Costs

Repairs & maintenance Annual % of purchase price
% / yr
Insurance Annual % of purchase price
% / yr
Taxes & housing Annual % of purchase price
% / yr
Fuel & energy Annual fuel, electricity, and lubricants
$

Annual Benefit

What this investment puts in your pocket each year — revenue and savings. This is the number that drives payback period and NPV.

Annual cash benefit Examples: extra bushels × price, custom-work revenue, fuel/labor saved, drainage yield bump × acres, storage premium captured
$
Discount rate Your cost of capital or required return — what this money could earn in your next-best alternative. 6–9% is a common target for farm capital.
% / yr

Lease Alternative

If a lease option exists, enter the terms here. The tool compares the present value of leasing against owning over the lease term. Set lease payment to $0 to skip this comparison.

Annual lease payment
$
Lease term
years
Lessee covers maintenance? If yes, the same repair/insurance costs are added to the lease side. If no, those are bundled in the lease payment.

Annual Ownership Cost — Breakdown

The full DIRTI calculation (Depreciation, Interest, Repairs, Taxes, Insurance) plus fuel. This is what owning this asset actually costs you each year on average.

Component Annual % of total
Depreciation $0 0%
Interest (avg.) $0 0%
Repairs & maintenance$0 0%
Insurance $0 0%
Taxes & housing $0 0%
Fuel & energy $0 0%
Total annual cost $0 100%

Net Present Value — Detail

All cash flows over the useful life, discounted to today's dollars. Positive NPV means the investment beats your discount rate. Negative means your money should go somewhere else.

Cash flow Nominal Present value
Initial down payment $0 $0
Loan payments (over term) $0 $0
Operating costs (R/I/T/Fuel)$0 $0
Total outflows $0 $0
Annual benefits $0 $0
Salvage value (year 10) $0 $0
Total inflows $0 $0
Net Present Value $0 $0

Lease vs. Buy — Side by Side

Total cost in present-value dollars over the lease term. The lower number wins.

Buy Better
$0
Total cost (PV)
Down payment$0
Loan payments$0
Operating costs$0
Less: residual value$0
Lease Better
$0
Total cost (PV)
Lease payments$0
Operating costs$0
End-of-term value$0
  

Annual ownership cost uses the standard DIRTI method (Depreciation, Interest, Repairs, Taxes, Insurance) used by ag economists at Iowa State, Purdue, and the University of Kentucky. Depreciation is straight-line: (Price − Salvage) ÷ Life. Interest is calculated on the average loan balance over the loan term, then averaged across the useful life of the asset. Default repair percentages reflect ASABE EP496 machinery cost estimation guidelines.

NPV and payback use simple discounted cash flow with end-of-year cash flows and a constant discount rate. Payback period is calculated on undiscounted net annual cash flow (benefit minus operating cost minus loan payment) against the down payment, then refined to fractional years. NPV uses your discount rate to bring all flows to present value over the full useful life of the asset, including the salvage value at the end.

Lease vs. buy compares the present value of cash outflows over the lease term only. The buy side includes the down payment, scheduled loan payments during those years, operating costs, and the present value of the residual value (asset value at the end of the lease term, depreciated linearly from purchase). The lease side includes annual lease payments and operating costs if the lessee is responsible for maintenance. Both are pre-tax — consult your tax advisor for after-tax analysis, particularly for Section 179 and bonus depreciation effects which can substantially favor purchase.