Feedlot closeout on pen 14 — 90-day grain program finished yesterday. You need FCR and cost of gain before the performance summary goes to the owner this afternoon.
FCR = Feed consumed (kg) ÷ Weight gained (kg)
Lower FCR = more efficient. Industry benchmarks:Feedlot cattle: 6–8 · Grass-fed cattle: 12–18 · Sheep: 6–9 · Lamb: 5–8 · Pig: 2.5–3.5 · Broiler: 1.8–2.2
Improving FCR: optimise ration energy density, control feed wastage, manage parasite burden, ensure ad-lib water.
1 What this calculator does
Calculates Feed Conversion Ratio (FCR), Feed Efficiency (FE%), cost of gain per kg liveweight, and total feed cost for a pen or group. All calculations use dry matter (DM) basis.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
FCR = Total feed DM consumed (kg) / Total weight gained (kg)
FE% = 1 / FCR x 100
Cost of gain ($/kg LWG) = Feed cost ($/tonne DM) x FCR / 1,000
FCR measures kg of dry matter feed per 1 kg of liveweight gain. A feedlot steer on grain achieves FCR 6-7. Feed must be on a DM basis — wet feeds (silage, high-moisture grain) must be converted otherwise FCR appears artificially better. Cost of gain converts FCR to a dollar value comparable directly against the target sale price.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
FCR: 6,240 / 945 = 6.60 | Cost of gain: 380 x 6.60 / 1,000FCR: 2,100 / 210 = 10.0 | Cost of gain: 280 x 10.0 / 1,000Old cost of gain: 290 x 8.2 / 1,000 = $2.38/kg | New: 340 x 6.9 / 1,000 = $2.35/kg4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using as-fed weight instead of dry matter | Weighing wet silage without DM conversion | FCR appears lower (better) than actual — wrong management decisions | Convert all feeds to DM: silage typically 35% DM means 100 kg as-fed = 35 kg DM. |
| Feed delivered not feed consumed | Not accounting for refusals | FCR underestimated — ration appears more efficient than it is | FCR = feed consumed (delivered minus refusals). Weigh refusals accurately. |
| Not adjusting for deaths and hospital removals | Using pen entry and exit headcount without adjusting | Weight gain per head understated — FCR appears worse | Adjust for all animals removed: deaths, hospital removes, early drafts. |
| Comparing FCR between different weight classes | Comparing lightweight weaners to heavy finishers | Unfair comparison — lighter animals have inherently better FCR | Only compare FCR between animals of similar weight range and feeding system. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: