From someone who once thought “profit” just meant whatever was left after buying feed — and learned the hard way that a real P&L statement tells a completely different story.
I’ll be honest with you. The first time someone handed me a Profit and Loss statement for a poultry operation, I stared at it for a solid ten minutes and understood maybe 30% of it. Revenue? Sure. Net profit? Roughly. But depreciation, profit before tax, cost of sales broken down by chicks and feed separately — that was a different world.
But here’s the thing. Once you actually sit with a P&L sheet and trace where every dollar goes month by month, the business stops feeling like a gamble and starts feeling like something you can actually control. That’s exactly what this breakdown is about.
We’re going through a full 5-year monthly Profit and Loss statement for a commercial chicken farming operation — real numbers, real cost structures, real growth patterns. Whether you’re building your own plan or trying to understand one you’ve already got, this walkthrough will make it click.
Executive Summary
Understanding the Profit and Loss Statement
A Profit and Loss statement — also called an income statement or P&L — is simply a record of everything your business earned and everything it spent over a period of time. What’s left after subtracting all costs from all revenue is your net profit. Or in Year 1 of a chicken farm, your net loss.
The P&L we’re analyzing here covers 60 months across 5 years, broken down month by month. It tracks:
- Revenue from chicken sales
- Cost of Sales — chicks cost and feed cost
- Gross Profit — what’s left after production costs
- Operating Expenses — salaries, rent, utilities, marketing, depreciation, and more
- Profit Before Tax and Net Profit After Tax at 17%
Year 1 is entirely a setup year — zero revenue, all expenses. Year 2 is when the operation comes alive. By Year 5, the business is generating over $168 million in annual revenue with a net profit crossing $90 million. Let’s walk through how that happens.
Year 1 Profit and Loss Analysis
Revenue Performance
Year 1 total revenue: $0
| Description | Month 1 | Month 2 | Month 3 | Month 4 | Month 5 | Month 6 | Month 7 | Month 8 | Month 9 | Month 10 | Month 11 | Month 12 | Total Y1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | |||||||||||||
| Chicken Sale | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Other Income | $0 | $0 | |||||||||||
| Total Revenue | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Cost of Sales | |||||||||||||
| Chicks Cost | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Feed Cost | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Cost | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Gross Profit | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Operating Expenses | |||||||||||||
| Salaries & Benefits | $30,580 | $30,580 | $30,580 | $30,580 | $30,580 | $30,580 | $30,580 | $30,580 | $178,130 | $178,130 | $178,130 | $178,130 | $957,160 |
| Rent Expense | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $7,000 | $84,000 |
| Office Supplies | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $60,000 |
| Utilities | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $12,000 |
| Marketing & Advertising | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $60,000 |
| Legal & Professional | $959,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $2,000 | $981,000 |
| Travel Expense | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $1,000 | $12,000 |
| Entertainment | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $6,000 | $72,000 |
| Depreciation | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $1,846,800 |
| Total Operating Expenses | $1,168,480 | $211,480 | $211,480 | $211,480 | $211,480 | $211,480 | $211,480 | $211,480 | $359,030 | $359,030 | $359,030 | $359,030 | $4,084,960 |
| Net Profit | -$1,168,480 | -$211,480 | -$211,480 | -$211,480 | -$211,480 | -$211,480 | -$211,480 | -$211,480 | -$359,030 | -$359,030 | -$359,030 | -$359,030 | -$4,084,960 |
This is not a mistake in the spreadsheet. It’s the reality of starting a commercial poultry farm. The entire first year goes into construction, equipment installation, licensing, hiring, and preparation. Not a single chicken is sold. Every dollar spent in Year 1 is an investment in what comes next.
If this surprises you, it shouldn’t. Most large-scale agricultural operations have a zero-revenue startup phase. The question isn’t whether you’ll have one — it’s whether you’ve planned your funding to survive it.
Gross Profit Overview
With zero revenue comes zero gross profit. Total Cost of Sales in Year 1 is also $0 — no chicks purchased, no feed bought, because no production cycle has started yet.
Gross Profit Year 1: $0
Operating Expenses Breakdown
This is where Year 1 gets expensive. Even with no revenue coming in, the business is spending every single month. Here’s what those costs look like:
Salaries and Benefits
Salaries start small — $30,580 per month in the first 8 months — then jump to $178,130 per month from Month 9 through Month 12 as the team expands ahead of production launch.
Total Year 1 Salaries: $957,160
That jump in Month 9 is significant. It reflects hiring of farm managers, production supervisors, and operational staff who need to be trained and in place before birds arrive. A common mistake is hiring too late — then you’re training people while birds are already on the ground, which leads to costly errors.
Rent Expense
A steady $7,000 per month throughout Year 1.
Total Year 1 Rent: $84,000
Office Supplies
$5,000 per month consistently across all 12 months.
Total Year 1 Office Supplies: $60,000
Utilities
$1,000 per month — surprisingly low in Year 1 because the farm buildings aren’t in full operational mode yet. This number will climb significantly in production years.
Total Year 1 Utilities: $12,000
Marketing and Advertising Costs
$5,000 per month — and yes, you should be spending on marketing even before you have product to sell. Building relationships with distributors, supermarkets, and processors takes time. Starting that work in Year 1 means you have buyers lined up when Year 2 production begins.
Total Year 1 Marketing: $60,000
Legal and Professional Fees
This is the big one in Year 1. Month 1 alone costs $959,000 in legal and professional fees — this covers business registration, permits, environmental compliance, agricultural licenses, and likely consultant fees for farm design and setup. Months 2–12 drop back to a manageable $2,000 per month.
Total Year 1 Legal & Professional: $981,000
That Month 1 spike is real and it catches first-time operators off guard. Budget for it upfront.
Travel Expenses
$1,000 per month — for site visits, supplier meetings, and regulatory appointments.
Total Year 1 Travel: $12,000
Entertainment Expenses
$6,000 per month — relationship-building costs with potential buyers and partners.
Total Year 1 Entertainment: $72,000
Miscellaneous Expenses
$0 — well planned, no unbudgeted surprises in Year 1. This is actually impressive and reflects tight financial discipline.
Depreciation Expense
$153,900 per month every single month across all 5 years.
Total Year 1 Depreciation: $1,846,800
Depreciation is the big silent cost that many new poultry entrepreneurs overlook because no cash leaves your account for it. But it reflects the declining value of your farm buildings, equipment, and infrastructure over time. It’s a real cost — and it’s tax-relevant.
Total Operating Expenses
| Month | Operating Expenses |
|---|---|
| Month 1 | $1,168,480 |
| Months 2–8 | $211,480 each |
| Months 9–12 | $359,030 each |
| Total Year 1 | $4,084,960 |
Profit Before Tax
With zero revenue and $4,084,960 in operating expenses, the result is a loss:
Year 1 Profit Before Tax: -$4,084,960
No tax is owed on a loss.
Net Profit Analysis
Year 1 Net Profit: -$4,084,960
This is your startup cost. It’s planned, it’s expected, and if your funding is structured correctly, it’s survivable. The farms that fail aren’t the ones that lose money in Year 1 — they’re the ones that run out of cash doing it.
Year 2 Profit and Loss Analysis
Revenue Growth from Year 1
Year 2 is when the business wakes up. Production cycles begin and chicken sales start generating real income.
The revenue pattern is interesting — sales happen in alternating months, reflecting production cycles:
| Description | Month 13 | Month 14 | Month 15 | Month 16 | Month 17 | Month 18 | Month 19 | Month 20 | Month 21 | Month 22 | Month 23 | Month 24 | Total Y2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | |||||||||||||
| Chicken Sale | $7,020,000 | $0 | $7,020,000 | $0 | $7,020,000 | $0 | $14,040,000 | $0 | $14,040,000 | $0 | $14,040,000 | $0 | $63,180,000 |
| Other Income | $0 | $0 | |||||||||||
| Total Revenue | $7,020,000 | $0 | $7,020,000 | $0 | $7,020,000 | $0 | $14,040,000 | $0 | $14,040,000 | $0 | $14,040,000 | $0 | $63,180,000 |
| Cost of Sales | |||||||||||||
| Chicks Cost | $600,000 | $0 | $600,000 | $0 | $600,000 | $0 | $1,200,000 | $0 | $1,200,000 | $0 | $1,200,000 | $0 | $5,400,000 |
| Feed Cost | $1,500,000 | $0 | $1,500,000 | $0 | $1,500,000 | $0 | $3,000,000 | $0 | $3,000,000 | $0 | $3,000,000 | $0 | $13,500,000 |
| Total Cost | $2,100,000 | $0 | $2,100,000 | $0 | $2,100,000 | $0 | $4,200,000 | $0 | $4,200,000 | $0 | $4,200,000 | $0 | $18,900,000 |
| Gross Profit | $4,920,000 | $0 | $4,920,000 | $0 | $4,920,000 | $0 | $9,840,000 | $0 | $9,840,000 | $0 | $9,840,000 | $0 | $44,280,000 |
| Operating Expenses | |||||||||||||
| Salaries & Benefits | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $194,820 | $2,337,840 |
| Rent Expense | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $7,350 | $88,200 |
| Office Supplies | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $63,000 |
| Utilities | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $12,600 |
| Marketing & Advertising | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $5,250 | $63,000 |
| Legal & Professional | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $2,100 | $25,200 |
| Travel Expense | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $1,050 | $12,600 |
| Entertainment | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $6,300 | $75,600 |
| Depreciation | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $1,846,800 |
| Total Operating Expenses | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $377,070 | $4,524,840 |
| Profit Before Tax | $4,542,930 | -$377,070 | $4,542,930 | -$377,070 | $4,542,930 | -$377,070 | $9,462,930 | -$377,070 | $9,462,930 | -$377,070 | $9,462,930 | -$377,070 | $39,755,160 |
| Tax on Profit (17%) | $772,298 | $0 | $772,298 | $0 | $772,298 | $0 | $1,608,698 | $0 | $1,608,698 | $0 | $1,608,698 | $0 | $7,142,989 |
| Net Profit | $3,770,632 | -$377,070 | $3,770,632 | -$377,070 | $3,770,632 | -$377,070 | $7,854,232 | -$377,070 | $7,854,232 | -$377,070 | $7,854,232 | -$377,070 | $32,612,171 |
The jump from $7 million to $14 million per cycle from Month 19 onward reflects a scale-up in flock size mid-year — a planned expansion once initial operations prove stable.
Gross Profit Performance
Cost of Sales Breakdown
Chicks Cost
Mirrors the revenue cycle — costs hit in production months only:
- Months 13–18: $600,000 per active month
- Months 19–24: $1,200,000 per active month
Total Year 2 Chicks Cost: $5,400,000
Feed Cost
Feed is the largest direct production cost — roughly 2.5x the chicks cost:
- Months 13–18: $1,500,000 per active month
- Months 19–24: $3,000,000 per active month
Total Year 2 Feed Cost: $13,500,000
Total Year 2 Cost of Sales: $18,900,000
Year 2 Gross Profit: $44,280,000 — a gross margin of approximately 70%. That’s a healthy starting point for a commercial operation.
Operating Expense Analysis
Operating expenses stabilize in Year 2 at $377,070 per month — every month, consistently. No more big spikes from legal setup costs.
Total Year 2 Operating Expenses: $4,524,840
Profit Before Tax
Year 2 Profit Before Tax: $39,755,160
Net Profit Analysis
After 17% tax on profitable months:
Year 2 Net Profit: $32,612,171
Going from -$4 million to +$32 million in one year. That’s the power of a well-planned production ramp-up — and exactly why surviving Year 1 is so critical.
Year 3 Profit and Loss Analysis
Revenue Expansion Trends
Year 3 production scales up significantly. Revenue per active month jumps to $21,060,000, reflecting a larger flock or more frequent production cycles.
| Description | Month 25 | Month 26 | Month 27 | Month 28 | Month 29 | Month 30 | Month 31 | Month 32 | Month 33 | Month 34 | Month 35 | Month 36 | Total Y3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | |||||||||||||
| Chicken Sale | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $126,360,000 |
| Other Income | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Revenue | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $21,060,000 | $0 | $126,360,000 |
| Cost of Sales | |||||||||||||
| Chicks Cost | $1,800,000 | $0 | $1,800,000 | $0 | $1,800,000 | $0 | $1,800,000 | $0 | $1,800,000 | $0 | $1,800,000 | $0 | $10,800,000 |
| Feed Cost | $4,500,000 | $0 | $4,500,000 | $0 | $4,500,000 | $0 | $4,500,000 | $0 | $4,500,000 | $0 | $4,500,000 | $0 | $27,000,000 |
| Total Cost | $6,300,000 | $0 | $6,300,000 | $0 | $6,300,000 | $0 | $6,300,000 | $0 | $6,300,000 | $0 | $6,300,000 | $0 | $37,800,000 |
| Gross Profit | $14,760,000 | $0 | $14,760,000 | $0 | $14,760,000 | $0 | $14,760,000 | $0 | $14,760,000 | $0 | $14,760,000 | $0 | $88,560,000 |
| Operating Expenses | |||||||||||||
| Salaries & Benefits | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $424,758 | $5,097,096 |
| Rent Expense | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $7,718 | $92,610 |
| Office Supplies | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $66,150 |
| Utilities | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $13,230 |
| Marketing & Advertising | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $5,513 | $66,150 |
| Legal & Professional | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $2,205 | $26,460 |
| Travel Expense | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $1,103 | $13,230 |
| Entertainment | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $6,615 | $79,380 |
| Depreciation | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $1,846,800 |
| Total Operating Expenses | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $608,426 | $7,301,106 |
| Profit Before Tax | $14,151,575 | -$608,426 | $14,151,575 | -$608,426 | $14,151,575 | -$608,426 | $14,151,575 | -$608,426 | $14,151,575 | -$608,426 | $14,151,575 | -$608,426 | $81,258,894 |
| Tax on Profit (17%) | $2,405,768 | $0 | $2,405,768 | $0 | $2,405,768 | $0 | $2,405,768 | $0 | $2,405,768 | $0 | $2,405,768 | $0 | $14,434,606 |
| Net Profit | $11,745,807 | -$608,426 | $11,745,807 | -$608,426 | $11,745,807 | -$608,426 | $11,745,807 | -$608,426 | $11,745,807 | -$608,426 | $11,745,807 | -$608,426 | $66,824,288 |
Total Year 3 Revenue: $126,360,000 — exactly double Year 2.
Gross Profit Growth
Production Cost Analysis
- Chicks Cost per active month: $1,800,000
- Feed Cost per active month: $4,500,000
- Total Year 3 Cost of Sales: $37,800,000
Year 3 Gross Profit: $88,560,000
Gross margin holds steady at 70% — which tells you the cost structure is scaling efficiently. You’re not paying more per bird to produce more birds, which is the goal of operational scaling.
Operating Expense Trends
Salaries increase to $424,758 per month as the team grows with production volume.
Total Year 3 Operating Expenses: $7,301,106
Profit Before Tax
Year 3 Profit Before Tax: $81,258,894
Net Profit Performance
Year 3 Net Profit: $66,824,288
Year-on-year net profit growth of approximately 105% from Year 2 to Year 3. This is peak growth rate — enjoy it while it lasts.
Year 4 Profit and Loss Analysis
Revenue Forecast
Year 4 production continues scaling. Revenue per active month rises to $28,080,000.
| Description | Month 37 | Month 38 | Month 39 | Month 40 | Month 41 | Month 42 | Month 43 | Month 44 | Month 45 | Month 46 | Month 47 | Month 48 | Total Y4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | |||||||||||||
| Chicken Sale | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $168,480,000 |
| Other Income | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Revenue | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $168,480,000 |
| Cost of Sales | |||||||||||||
| Chicks Cost | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $14,400,000 |
| Feed Cost | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $36,000,000 |
| Total Cost | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $50,400,000 |
| Gross Profit | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $118,080,000 |
| Operating Expenses | |||||||||||||
| Salaries & Benefits | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $468,505 | $5,622,064 |
| Rent Expense | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $8,103 | $97,241 |
| Office Supplies | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $69,458 |
| Utilities | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $13,892 |
| Marketing & Advertising | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $5,788 | $69,458 |
| Legal & Professional | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $2,315 | $27,783 |
| Travel Expense | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $1,158 | $13,892 |
| Entertainment | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $6,946 | $83,349 |
| Depreciation | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $1,846,800 |
| Total Operating Expenses | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $653,661 | $7,843,934 |
| Profit Before Tax | $19,026,339 | -$653,661 | $19,026,339 | -$653,661 | $19,026,339 | -$653,661 | $19,026,339 | -$653,661 | $19,026,339 | -$653,661 | $19,026,339 | -$653,661 | $110,236,066 |
| Tax on Profit (17%) | $3,234,478 | $0 | $3,234,478 | $0 | $3,234,478 | $0 | $3,234,478 | $0 | $3,234,478 | $0 | $3,234,478 | $0 | $19,406,866 |
| Net Profit | $15,791,861 | -$653,661 | $15,791,861 | -$653,661 | $15,791,861 | -$653,661 | $15,791,861 | -$653,661 | $15,791,861 | -$653,661 | $15,791,861 | -$653,661 | $90,829,200 |
Total Year 4 Revenue: $168,480,000
Gross Profit Analysis
- Chicks Cost per active month: $2,400,000
- Feed Cost per active month: $6,000,000
- Total Year 4 Cost of Sales: $50,400,000
Year 4 Gross Profit: $118,080,000
Gross margin: 70% — consistent for the third straight year.
Cost Management Performance
The fact that gross margin stays exactly at 70% across Years 2, 3, and 4 is not an accident — it reflects disciplined cost management. Feed conversion ratios are being maintained, mortality rates are controlled, and pricing power is stable.
Operating Expense Review
Salaries rise to $468,505 per month.
Total Year 4 Operating Expenses: $7,843,934
Profit Before Tax
Year 4 Profit Before Tax: $110,236,066
Net Profit Growth
Year 4 Net Profit: $90,829,200
Growth from Year 3: approximately 35.9% — moderating from the Year 3 peak but still very strong in absolute terms.
Year 5 Profit and Loss Analysis
Revenue Stability and Forecast
Year 5 revenue holds at the same level as Year 4 — $28,080,000 per active month.
| Description | Month 49 | Month 50 | Month 51 | Month 52 | Month 53 | Month 54 | Month 55 | Month 56 | Month 57 | Month 58 | Month 59 | Month 60 | Total Y5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | |||||||||||||
| Chicken Sale | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $168,480,000 |
| Other Income | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Revenue | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $28,080,000 | $0 | $168,480,000 |
| Cost of Sales | |||||||||||||
| Chicks Cost | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $2,400,000 | $0 | $14,400,000 |
| Feed Cost | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $6,000,000 | $0 | $36,000,000 |
| Total Cost | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $8,400,000 | $0 | $50,400,000 |
| Gross Profit | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $19,680,000 | $0 | $118,080,000 |
| Operating Expenses | |||||||||||||
| Salaries & Benefits | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $513,267 | $6,159,202 |
| Rent Expense | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $8,509 | $102,103 |
| Office Supplies | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $72,930 |
| Utilities | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $14,586 |
| Marketing & Advertising | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $6,078 | $72,930 |
| Legal & Professional | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $2,431 | $29,172 |
| Travel Expense | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $1,216 | $14,586 |
| Entertainment | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $7,293 | $87,516 |
| Depreciation | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $153,900 | $1,846,800 |
| Total Operating Expenses | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $699,985 | $8,399,826 |
| Profit Before Tax | $18,980,015 | -$699,985 | $18,980,015 | -$699,985 | $18,980,015 | -$699,985 | $18,980,015 | -$699,985 | $18,980,015 | -$699,985 | $18,980,015 | -$699,985 | $109,680,174 |
| Tax on Profit (17%) | $3,226,602 | $0 | $3,226,602 | $0 | $3,226,602 | $0 | $3,226,602 | $0 | $3,226,602 | $0 | $3,226,602 | $0 | $19,359,615 |
| Net Profit | $15,753,412 | -$699,985 | $15,753,412 | -$699,985 | $15,753,412 | -$699,985 | $15,753,412 | -$699,985 | $15,753,412 | -$699,985 | $15,753,412 | -$699,985 | $90,320,559 |
Total Year 5 Revenue: $168,480,000
This plateau signals that the current operation has reached its capacity ceiling. To grow further, the business needs new infrastructure investment — a second farm site, expanded processing, or product diversification.
Gross Profit Performance
- Total Year 5 Cost of Sales: $50,400,000
Year 5 Gross Profit: $118,080,000
Gross margin: 70% — stable across all production years.
Operating Cost Trends
Salaries increase slightly to $513,267 per month — natural incremental growth.
Total Year 5 Operating Expenses: $8,399,826
Profit Before Tax
Year 5 Profit Before Tax: $109,680,174
A slight dip from Year 4 ($110.2M) purely due to rising salary costs against flat revenue — a normal and expected squeeze at capacity ceiling.
Net Profit Forecast
Year 5 Net Profit: $90,320,559
Nearly identical to Year 4. This consistency is actually a sign of operational maturity — the business is stable, predictable, and ready for its next phase of growth.
Revenue Growth Analysis
Revenue Trend Across Five Years
| Year | Total Revenue | Growth |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $0 | — |
| Year 2 | $63,180,000 | First revenue |
| Year 3 | $126,360,000 | +100% |
| Year 4 | $168,480,000 | +33.3% |
| Year 5 | $168,480,000 | 0% |
Revenue Growth Drivers
Three things drove the revenue growth in this model:
Flock size scaling. Revenue per active month doubled from Year 2 to Year 3, then grew 33% more in Year 4 — all driven by putting more birds on the ground per cycle.
Production cycle optimization. The alternating month pattern (revenue month, then zero month) reflects grow-out cycles. As the team gets more efficient, this rhythm becomes predictable and plannable.
Price stability. Revenue per bird appears stable across years — no price inflation assumption baked in. This is conservative and realistic for contract-based poultry sales.
Gross Profit Analysis
Gross Profit Trend
| Year | Gross Profit | Gross Margin |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $0 | — |
| Year 2 | $44,280,000 | 70% |
| Year 3 | $88,560,000 | 70% |
| Year 4 | $118,080,000 | 70% |
| Year 5 | $118,080,000 | 70% |
Gross Margin Performance
A sustained 70% gross margin is impressive. The key contributors: feed costs run at approximately 21% of revenue, and chicks cost at around 8.5% of revenue. Together, direct production costs consume only 30% of revenue — leaving 70 cents of every dollar to cover overheads and generate profit.
In practice, watching your feed conversion ratio (FCR) weekly is the single best leading indicator of whether your gross margin is on track or slipping.
Operating Expense Analysis
Fixed Expenses vs Variable Expenses
The biggest fixed expense across all 5 years is Depreciation at $153,900/month — it never changes. This is your infrastructure cost, and it’s unavoidable.
The biggest variable expense is Salaries, which grew from $957,160 in Year 1 to a projected $6,159,202 in Year 5 — a 543% increase over the period as the workforce scaled with production.
Major Cost Drivers
| Expense | Year 1 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|
| Salaries & Benefits | $957,160 | $6,159,202 |
| Depreciation | $1,846,800 | $1,846,800 |
| Legal & Professional | $981,000 | $29,172 |
| Marketing | $60,000 | $72,930 |
| Rent | $84,000 | $102,103 |
Expense Growth Trends
Legal fees drop dramatically after Year 1 — from nearly $1 million to just $25,200 in Year 2. This is the classic startup cost curve: high upfront, then leveling off. Every other operating expense grows modestly at approximately 5% per year, reflecting planned inflation adjustments.
Profitability Analysis
Profit Before Tax Trends
| Year | Profit Before Tax |
|---|---|
| Year 1 | -$4,084,960 |
| Year 2 | $39,755,160 |
| Year 3 | $81,258,894 |
| Year 4 | $110,236,066 |
| Year 5 | $109,680,174 |
Net Profit Growth Over Five Years
| Year | Net Profit | Tax Paid |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | -$4,084,960 | $0 |
| Year 2 | $32,612,171 | $7,142,989 |
| Year 3 | $66,824,288 | $14,434,606 |
| Year 4 | $90,829,200 | $19,406,866 |
| Year 5 | $90,320,559 | $19,359,615 |
5-Year cumulative net profit: $276,501,258
Profitability Performance Review
The tax rate of 17% is consistently applied from Year 2 onward — only on profitable months, which is exactly how corporate taxation works. Months with negative results contribute zero tax, which is why understanding monthly cashflow matters even when annual numbers look great.
Key Financial Insights
Strongest Financial Indicators
The 70% gross margin held for four consecutive production years is the standout strength of this P&L. It tells you the production model is efficient and the cost structure is well-controlled. Combined with net profit margins above 50% in Years 2–5, this is a financially robust operation by any standard.
Areas Requiring Cost Control
Salaries are the fastest-growing cost line — nearly 6.5x over 5 years while revenue only grew 2.7x (Year 2 to Year 5). At some point, if this trend continues into Year 6 and 7, salary growth will start compressing net margins. Workforce productivity metrics need to be tracked carefully.
Depreciation is fixed but significant. By Year 5, it’s consuming nearly 1.1% of revenue annually. As existing assets age and new investments are made for Phase 2 expansion, this number will rise — factor it into your next planning cycle.
Long-Term Profit Potential
The revenue plateau in Year 5 isn’t a warning sign — it’s a starting line. A business generating $90 million in annual net profit with a stable cost structure and proven operational systems is in an ideal position to raise capital for expansion. The P&L proves the model works. The next question is how big you want to build it.
Final Thoughts
What I love about going through a P&L like this is how much story it tells beyond the numbers. Year 1 is commitment — you’re spending without earning because you believe in what’s coming. Year 2 is proof — the first revenue months validate everything you built. Years 3 and 4 are momentum — scaling what works. Year 5 is maturity — a stable, profitable operation ready for its next chapter.
If you’re building your own chicken farm P&L, use this structure as your template. Track every cost line monthly, not just annually. Watch your gross margin like a hawk — if it dips below 65%, something in your production is off. And never forget that depreciation, even though it doesn’t leave your bank account, is a real cost that belongs in your plan.
The numbers in this statement aren’t wishful thinking. They’re the result of planning every hire, every feed contract, every production cycle, and every overhead item before a single bird is purchased. That’s what separates a farm that thrives from one that just survives.
Building your own poultry farm P&L? Drop your questions in the comments — happy to help you work through the numbers.