One of the biggest mistakes farmers make is this:
They wait until harvest day to think about price.
By then, it is too late.
Pricing is not something you decide in the market under pressure. It should be part of your plan before you plant.
Many farmers in Nigeria produce well but struggle financially because they price from emotion. When supply is high, they panic and sell low. When demand rises, they assume it will last forever.
Good pricing is not about luck. It is about structure.
Let us break it down in a practical way.
Why Most Farmers Price From Fear
Picture this.
You harvest your maize. The market is full. Traders are offering lower prices than you expected. You need cash. You sell.
That is panic pricing.
Or you hear that tomatoes are selling high in Lagos. Everyone rushes to plant tomatoes. By the time harvest comes, the market is flooded. Price crashes.
That is trend pricing.
Neither approach is stable.
If you want to build a serious agribusiness, your price must be based on numbers.
Step One: Know Your Real Cost
You cannot price correctly if you do not know your total cost.
And many farmers calculate cost halfway.
They include:
- Seeds
- Fertilizer
- Chemicals
But forget:
- Land clearing
- Labor
- Transport
- Storage
- Post-harvest handling
- Loan interest (if any)
- Security
- Packaging
All these are real expenses.
If it costs โฆ600,000 to cultivate one hectare and you harvest produce that sells for โฆ700,000, your profit is โฆ100,000. Not โฆ300,000. Not โฆ200,000.
Let us say your maize costs โฆ700 per unit to produce and transport. Selling at โฆ750 may look profitable. But small fluctuations in market price can wipe out that margin.
When your numbers are clear, your minimum acceptable price becomes clear.
That gives you confidence during negotiation.

Step Two: Understand Market Cycles
Agricultural prices move in cycles.
During harvest season, supply increases. Prices usually fall.
During off-season, supply reduces. Prices often rise.
This pattern applies to crops like maize, rice, tomatoes, pepper, and many others in Nigeria.
If you harvest at peak supply and have no storage plan, you are forced to sell low.
But if you plan for storage and can wait for lean season, you may sell higher.
Timing affects income more than many farmers realize.
Do not only ask, โWhat is the price today?โ
Ask, โWhat is the price trend across the year?โ
Visit markets. Track monthly prices. Speak with traders. Study patterns.
Market knowledge reduces panic.
Step Three: Separate Revenue From Profit
High price does not always mean high profit.
If tomatoes sell for โฆ30,000 per basket but production cost was too high due to pest damage or extra labor, profit may still be small.
Likewise, even moderate prices can yield good profit if cost control was strong.
Focus on margin, not just selling price.
Margin is the difference between total cost and selling price.
Strong agribusiness owners protect margin first.
Step Four: Avoid Following the Crowd
Many farmers make decisions based on what others are planting.
If cassava looks profitable this year, everyone shifts to cassava. Next season, supply increases and price falls.
This cycle repeats.
Instead of copying trends blindly, ask:
Is there confirmed demand?
Do I have a buyer?
Can I produce at lower cost than average?
If the answer is no, reconsider.
Trend farming without structure often leads to loss.
Step Five: Consider Contract Farming
One way to reduce pricing uncertainty is through supply contracts.
With contract farming, you agree on quantity and sometimes price before planting.
This reduces risk.
However, contracts must be clear and realistic. Study the terms. Ensure you can meet quality standards.
Contracts do not remove risk completely, but they improve stability.
For investors, this is often safer than open-market speculation.
Step Six: Think Beyond Raw Sales
Another way to improve pricing power is through value addition.
Instead of selling raw cassava, processing into garri or flour may increase income.
Instead of selling fresh pepper, drying or packaging may extend shelf life and reduce pressure to sell immediately.
Processing requires planning and investment, but it can protect you from sudden price drops.

When you move slightly up the value chain, you reduce dependence on daily market price swings.
Step Seven: Build Relationships, Not Just Transactions
Pricing improves when relationships improve.
If you consistently supply quality produce, buyers trust you. That trust can lead to better pricing and repeat purchases.
Random, one-time selling reduces your leverage.
Strong agribusiness is built on networks.
Transporters, wholesalers, processors, and retailers are not enemies. They are part of your ecosystem.
When relationships are steady, negotiation becomes easier.
The Danger of Desperation Sales
Desperation is expensive.
If you rely on quick sales to pay urgent bills, you lose bargaining power.
This is why financial planning matters in farming.
Having some working capital allows you to wait for better prices instead of selling immediately at low rates.
Cash flow planning protects pricing strategy.
What Investors Should Watch
Investors should not only ask about projected yield.
They should ask:
How was price calculated?
Is there historical market data?
Is there storage capacity?
Is there a pre-arranged buyer?
If pricing assumptions are weak, projected returns may not be realistic.
Good pricing models are based on average market prices, not peak market prices.
Using best-case scenario numbers to attract investment creates future disappointment.
Transparency builds long-term trust.
A Simple Pricing Formula to Guide You
Here is a basic structure you can use:
Total Cost per Unit
- Desired Profit Margin
= Minimum Selling Price
Then compare that with:
Average Market Price (Not Highest Market Price)
If average market price is below your minimum selling price, you either reduce cost or reconsider the crop.
This simple discipline prevents emotional decisions.
Pricing Is Strategy, Not Guesswork
Modern farming requires more than good soil.
It requires numbers.
It requires awareness.
It requires discipline.
If you want to succeed in agribusiness in Nigeria, stop pricing from panic. Start pricing from preparation.
When cost is clear, market cycle is understood, and margin is protected, confidence increases.
And confident farmers negotiate better.
In the next article, we will discuss seasonal market demand and how to identify what sells best at different times of the year.
Because in agriculture, timing and price work together.















