Farm reports β€” yield and profitability β€” AADOPS Guide@endsection AADOPS
Guide β€Ί Farmer Module β€Ί Farm reports β€” yield and profitability

Farm reports β€” yield and profitability

How to use COMPLIED's farm reports to understand your yield performance, cost trends, and profitability across seasons.

Farmer
Updated 06 Jun 2026
Before you start
  • At least one completed crop cycle with a recorded harvest

What farm reports show you

AADOPS's farm reports turn your crop cycle records into business intelligence. They answer the questions every serious farmer needs to answer: Am I profitable? Which crop makes me the most money per hectare? Are my costs rising or falling? Is my yield improving over time?

Accessing farm reports

Go to Reports β†’ Farm yield and profitability. Select the date range and the crop or cycles you want to analyse.

Key metrics in the report

Yield per hectare β€” how many kilograms your farm produces per hectare for each crop and season. Compare this across cycles to see whether your agronomic practices are improving.

Total input costs β€” all costs recorded against each cycle, broken down by input type. Useful for identifying which cost categories are growing fastest.

Cost per kilogram β€” your production cost per unit of output. The essential profitability metric for any farming operation.

Revenue per cycle β€” if you have recorded sales from your harvest batches, this shows the total revenue generated from each crop cycle.

Gross profit per cycle β€” revenue minus input costs. Does not include transport, commission, or other post-harvest costs.

Season comparison β€” side-by-side comparison of the same crop across multiple seasons, showing yield, cost, and profit trends.

Exporting reports

Click Export PDF to download the farm report. This is useful for sharing with agricultural extension officers, cooperative administrators, or financial institutions considering agricultural loans.

Tip: Run your farm report at the end of every season β€” immediately after recording the harvest. The numbers are freshest then and the insights most actionable. A report run six months after harvest cannot help you change what you planted or how you managed the current season.
Was this article helpful?
← Previous
Listing your harvest on the marketplace
Related articles
β†’ Setting up your farm profile β†’ Starting a crop cycle β†’ Recording input costs β†’ Tracking growth stages