![]() ![]() Cotton, Potatoes and Beets are completely specialized making them terrible as your first choice because you'll have to spend a lot of time waiting between sales if you want to keep the prices up. Corn and Sunflowers at least tend to share the same tools to let you rotate and help keep prices up. Since each time you sell a crop to the market you lower the demand for that crop type, which drives down prices. I would suggest just starting with sowers and harvesters for grains first so you get the most diversity in crops to start. Buying food is more time consuming and expensive than providing your own, and ranching in general doesn't produce a ton of income per ranch in FS19. Ranching doesn't seem to be a very good idea until you harvest your own fields. At least you can do them before owning your own property to build up money to get started. Contracts don't always pay much for the effort put in but they keep you active. FS19 nerfed a lot of get-rich-quick schemes and nerfed the economy in general. Pay off the loans enough times and you can take them out again when you need an upgrade.Īs for making money quick, I'm not really sure. You can easily make up to $20,000 a day per small field depending on prices. I take out loans to get everything I need to farm a field or two and then I spend time paying off the loan each time I sell. I do run debt like most people probably do. So long as you are harvesting your own fields, you should be turning a profit each day, it just takes time. I don't know how you run out of money while farming. ![]() Using a cheap trailer setup with straps to transport makes this a ridiculous profit. Easy to turn a 3 or 4 times profit on purchase. You can buy the IBC containers of mollasses and instantly sell for a profit. Taking this approach makes it easier to just "squat" on a plot of land and assume you'll develop outward. Its just a place to park your equipment and develop your facilities. Its an easy flip approach.Īssume the first plot of land you buy will not turn much profit. You don't have to keep the plot of land for the trees to grow. 100 times 7000 per tree equals 700K profit. Plant new trees (100 to 200), in seven days you can do it again. Plan well on this by buying a plot, stripping it for every tree you can. This is usually my "kick starter" fund approach to making money. Lumber and forestry is an amazing income if you lease the forestry harvester. Instead store them and use them for the Potato sowing contracts. Harvest contracts always pay out unless you have Precision Farming DLC. I suggest 82's Logistics Fertilizer wagon. Lease a large capacity fertilizer wagon and immediately take four or five fertilizer contracts. This is EXCELLENT for getting a revenue stream going. Multiple Contracts Mod makes it easier to take multiple contracts at the same time. Just kind'a depends depends on how many farms are on your map. ![]() There is a mod "Better Contracts" that will give you more jobs but I've found that the basic game will keep you supplied with plenty of contracts with minimal downtime. If you have a silo, store the product until the price is at its highest for the best payout, though sometimes cash in hand is needed more now than in the future. There are usually a few cheap pieces of land around your starter farm and those help bring the income in with more crop to sell. I also tend to buy land in the beginning. Grass harvests are pretty complex, but you'll learn all the different pieces of gear to get them into bales and sell them. You learn what you need for potato and sugar beats, and cotton. You get to learn the other systems cause they'll make sure you have everything you need to do the job. Which is another good point of the job offers. You will almost always have to rent the gear. I've turned a 50K+ profit on them before. Those fill up the harvesters and trucks so fast, you end up having to do a lot of work running back and forth to sell, but the payout can be pretty good if you want to take the time. I tend to avoid the potato and sugar beat ones. FIX: Equipment with bundled items could not be bought (e.g.Few more tips on jobs. When you buy used equipment it is advised to give it a thorough greaseup and overall look at the mechanics to make sure everything is in good working order, the equipment has been used after all. They will most likely be somewhat dirty and for sure have a fair amount of hours under the hood (if there is any hood that is). ![]() They will scout the nearby areas for good deals on used high quality gear in good mechanical condition and sell them through the store.įrom now on the choice is yours, either you prefer to go for brand new shiny gear or you rather save some money by getting a reasonable price on a used but well functioning piece of equipment. Great news! The local dealership has announced that they will finally begin trading in used vehicles. ![]()
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