Shop & Stock
Whole Animal True Cost
The $/lb math buyers get wrong — turn any live/hanging/take-home quote into out-the-door cost and compare to grocery retail.
Whole Animal True Cost
Inputs
Average $/lb you'd pay at the store for equivalent meat mix
Results
Total out-the-door cost
Animal + cut & wrap + kill fee
$4,080.40
Effective $/lb — hanging
744 lb hanging
$5.48 /lb
Effective $/lb — take-home
498 lb packaged
$8.19 /lb
Grocery retail equivalent
498 lb × $8.00/lb
$3,987.84
Total savings vs grocery
-$92.56 (-2%)
vs store ground
Ground retail ≈ $8.00/lb
-$0.19 /lb cheaper
vs store premium cuts
Ribeye/tenderloin retail ≈ $18.00/lb
$9.81 /lb cheaper
How to use this
This is the calculator that clears up the “is it worth it?” question. A $4.50/lb quote sounds expensive — until you realize it’s on hanging weight, not take-home. A $6.50/lb quote sounds crazy — until you realize it’s on take-home, and every pound of it is steaks, roasts, and grass-fed ground from one animal you can trace by name.
The three stages a price can be quoted on:
- Live weight— cheapest-looking number, but almost no farmer actually quotes this to retail buyers. If they do, it’s usually $2.50–3.50/lb for beef.
- Hanging weight— the industry standard. Beef typically $4.00–6.00/lb, pork $3.00–4.50/lb, lamb $5.50–8.00/lb. This is the price you’ll hear most often.
- Take-home weight— what you actually take home in freezer paper. A “$4.50/lb hanging” quote works out to roughly $6.75/lb take-home for bone-in beef, once you also add cut-and-wrap and the kill fee. That take-home price is the honest comparison to grocery retail.
Processing fees are almost always separate and paid directly to the butcher. Kill fee is typically $75–150 flat per animal (or ~$0.20/lb). Cut and wrap is $0.75–1.00/lb of hanging weight for standard service, more for sausage-making, curing, or boneless upgrades.
The grocery comparison: supermarket ground beef runs $6–9/lb, ribeye and tenderloin $16–24/lb. When you split a take-home pound between ground, roasts, and premium steaks, a grass-fed half-beef usually lands cheaper than the averagegrocery retail mix — and every cut is quality you’d normally pay a premium for.
Formula
hanging = live × dressing_%
takehome = hanging × takehome_% (67% beef bone-in)
animal_cost = price × (live | hanging | takehome), depending on which stage the quote is on
total = animal_cost + (cut_wrap × hanging) + kill_fee
$/lb_takehome = total ÷ takehome
Related calculators
Live → Hanging Weight
What percentage of a live animal becomes hanging weight — by species. Know what you're really paying for.
Hanging → Take-Home Weight
From hanging carcass to packaged meat in your freezer — bone-in vs boneless yield by species.
Bulk Meat Savings
Compare a whole-animal purchase to grocery retail — see the real savings and freezer payback.
Formula
total = meat_price + cut_wrap × hanging + kill_fee