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Greenhouse ROI: Build the Payback Model Before You Trust the Payback Period

Greenhouse ROI is not a standard percentage. It is the cash left after crop losses, labor, energy, maintenance, finance, and replacement reserves, measured against the full installed investment. The calculation is useful only when every number comes from the same site, crop, season, and sales plan.

*By Coraline Liao, CEO, CFGET | Updated: July 16, 2026*

*Reviewed by CFGET Project Planning Team*

commercial greenhouse project under construction during an investment-scope review
A greenhouse ROI model should begin with the full installed project scope, not the frame quotation alone.

The suspicious greenhouse payback models are often the neatest ones. They start with a supplier price, multiply an optimistic yield by a good market price, and call the gap profit. Real projects are less tidy. A late crop, an undersized electrical connection, or a covering replacement can move the result more than a small discount on the frame.

A payback period is the last line, not the first

Start with annual cash flow. Payback comes later.

Line in the modelWhat belongs in it
Saleable crop revenueMarketable kilograms multiplied by the net farm-gate price after grading loss, packaging, commissions, and rejected product.
Direct crop costSeedlings, substrate, fertilizer, crop protection, packaging, water, and crop-specific consumables.
Operating overheadLabor, heating, cooling, electricity, repairs, sanitation, laboratory work, insurance, administration, and local transport.
Ownership and financeDepreciation, interest, taxes, permits, and the cost of capital tied up in the project.
Replacement reserveCovering, pumps, motors, pads, sensors, filters, screens, and control components that will not last as long as the main structure.

Annual operating cash is revenue minus the cash expenses above. Simple payback is the installed capital divided by that annual cash. If the annual cash turns negative in an ordinary bad year, the simple payback figure is not the main problem. Liquidity is.

Mississippi State University Extension uses the same basic discipline in its greenhouse tomato budget: capital, annual ownership cost, and variable crop cost are kept separate, and growers are told to replace the example assumptions with their own. The old dollar values are not a quotation for another country. The budgeting structure is still useful.

The quotation is only one part of installed capital

A greenhouse can arrive on time and still exceed its budget because the original model treated the supplier quotation as the whole investment.

galvanized greenhouse frame and unfinished foundation scope before equipment installation
Foundation work, utilities, equipment, freight, and commissioning belong in the capital base used for payback.
Capital itemCommon omission
Greenhouse supplyBuyers compare totals without checking steel weight, design loads, covering specification, ventilation area, or included systems.
LogisticsInland haulage, ocean freight, insurance, duties, unloading equipment, storage, and damaged-item handling may sit outside the offer.
Site workEarthwork, drainage, foundations, roads, fencing, water storage, transformer capacity, boiler fuel, and utility connections are usually local.
InstallationLocal labor, lifting equipment, accommodation, supervision, tools, testing, and commissioning need a named owner.
Start-up cashThe first crop uses labor, inputs, energy, packaging, and marketing cash before the project receives steady revenue.

I would not rank two quotations until both suppliers mark every line as included, excluded, optional, or supplied locally. Drawings help here. A general sales description can hide scope; a roof section, equipment layout, and packing list usually cannot.

The crop model can break before the greenhouse does

The revenue side deserves more skepticism than the structure price. Use saleable yield, not biological yield. Use the price received after grading and sales costs, not the best retail price found online.

Season matters too. A greenhouse may technically produce year-round while the profitable window is much shorter. Heating, cooling, pollination, disease pressure, and market price can move in opposite directions. A 2026 HortTechnology case study of a medium-sized Florida cherry tomato greenhouse found the operation slightly below break-even under its stated costs and selling price. The lesson is not that greenhouse tomatoes fail. It is that a technically productive greenhouse can still miss its economic target.

greenhouse fertigation and utility service area with pumps filters and maintenance access
Labor, energy, water treatment, repairs, and replacement equipment belong in the operating model.

Build a base case from numbers you can defend. Then change the few inputs that can hurt the project quickly:

  • Lower the saleable yield and delay the first stable harvest.
  • Reduce the selling price to the level available during a crowded market week.
  • Raise labor and energy costs using local tariffs, not supplier estimates.
  • Add crop disposal, sanitation, or one equipment repair.
  • Delay customer payment while keeping payroll and utilities on time.

This is not pessimism. It is a check on whether the business can survive a normal operating problem without emergency cash.

Evidence pack: numbers that belong beside the quote

Two sources are especially useful for the method:

The supplier should provide engineering scope. The buyer and local advisers must provide crop price, saleable yield, labor productivity, utility tariffs, taxes, finance, market access, and permit costs. Mixing those responsibilities produces a precise spreadsheet with weak inputs.

What I would ask CFGET to show

For an early project review, ask for the structural drawings, design loads, steel specification, covering, climate equipment list, irrigation and fertigation scope, electrical loads, packing list, spares, delivery terms, and installation boundary. Those documents define the part of the model a greenhouse supplier can support.

routine maintenance inside a working commercial tomato greenhouse
A downside case should allow for maintenance, crop interruption, replacement parts, and slower production ramp-up.

Questions to put in the spreadsheet before paying a deposit

QuestionEvidence to attach
What is the full installed capital?Supplier offer, freight terms, civil estimate, utilities, installation plan, commissioning, initial spares, and working capital.
What is the saleable crop volume?Crop schedule, plant density, expected grading loss, ramp-up period, and local grower or agronomist review.
What price reaches the farm?Buyer contracts or recent local sales records after packaging, commission, transport, and rejected product.
Which cost can change fastest?Local labor rates, electricity and fuel tariffs, water treatment, replacement intervals, and finance terms.
What stops the project?Minimum cash balance, break-even price, break-even saleable yield, and the month with the largest cash deficit.

My own stop signal is simple. If the project only pays back when yield, price, and uptime are all near their best case, it is not ready for a deposit. Change the design, the crop plan, the market plan, or the capital structure first.

Research note

This guide uses current AIO and search questions to identify what buyers are being told, then checks the answer against greenhouse enterprise-budget methods and project scope documents. The financial examples in linked studies belong to their own place, year, crop, and operating system. They are evidence for the method, not promised results for a CFGET project.

About Coraline and CFGET

Coraline Liao is CEO of CFGET. Her public LinkedIn profile describes her as a Greenhouse Technical Director with more than 15 years in the greenhouse industry, focused on customized climate-control and greenhouse solutions. Her published topics include greenhouse structure, light management, hydroponics, and fertigation.

For this article, that experience is used where a supplier can be useful: defining structure and equipment scope, drawings, utilities, installation boundaries, and replacement items. Local engineers, growers, accountants, and permitting authorities remain responsible for their parts of the final project.

Email: [email protected]

Company background: About CFGET

Company profile: CFGET GreenWay on LinkedIn

Related greenhouse planning pages

CFGET video: greenhouse options before comparing cost

This CFGET video gives a project visual to keep beside the cost discussion, because price only makes sense after the structure and system scope are clear.

Plastic film greenhouse case installation

Frequently asked questions

What is a reasonable greenhouse payback period?There is no universal period. It depends on crop price, saleable yield, labor, energy, finance, downtime, replacement cost, and the total installed project cost.
Should freight and installation be included in greenhouse ROI?Yes. The capital base should include imported supply, freight, duties, local civil work, utilities, installation, commissioning, initial spares, and working capital.
How should a buyer test a greenhouse ROI forecast?Run a downside case with lower saleable yield, a weaker selling price, higher energy or labor cost, slower ramp-up, and at least one repair or crop interruption.
Can a greenhouse supplier calculate the final ROI?A supplier can define structure and equipment scope. Local crop performance, selling price, labor, utility tariffs, taxes, finance, permits, and market access must come from the buyer and local advisers.
What should be compared before choosing the cheaper quotation?Compare drawings, steel weight, design loads, covering, climate equipment, irrigation, controls, packing, freight terms, installation boundaries, spare parts, and exclusions.

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