How this calculator works
The core rule comes from UMass Extension's manure inventory table, which reports fresh manure by 1,000-pound animal unit. The table uses 45 pounds per day for a horse, 60 pounds for a beef cow-calf unit, and 106 pounds for a lactating dairy cow whose manure is handled as a solid. This calculator scales the selected rate to each group's average live weight, multiplies by head count, then totals every group across the collection days you enter.
The easy-to-miss addition is bedding. The extension table describes manure before bedding, but what leaves a stall or barn usually includes shavings, straw, or another absorbent material. The calculator keeps fresh manure and bedding separate, then adds your bedding percentage to show total waste weight. Its 5% starting value follows UMass's published example, but it is not a universal barn average. Manure deposited on pasture may not be collected at all, while heavily bedded stalls can add far more material than this default.
Use judgment before turning the tonnage into a storage design. Feed, water, animal class, bedding practice, rainfall, wash water, and handling all change the weight, moisture, and density of the pile. A weight estimate cannot by itself tell you the required cubic yards or pad dimensions. Measure actual waste from your operation when possible, allow for periods when fields or hauling routes are unavailable, and ask local extension or conservation staff about setbacks, runoff control, and storage construction. Manure nutrient content also varies, so land application should follow soil and manure testing rather than this output. Pair this waste estimate with the same herd's winter feed plan and backup-water requirement. Entering the actual payload or container capacity converts the period total into whole loads or trips, average loads per week, and unused capacity in the final load.
Method and rates follow UMass Extension's “Manure Inventory.” Planning estimate only — confirm actual waste, storage requirements, and nutrient-management rules with local agricultural professionals.
Frequently asked questions
How much manure does a horse produce per day?
Using UMass Extension's planning table, a 1,000-pound horse produces about 45 pounds of fresh manure daily, before bedding is added.
How much manure does a cow produce per day?
A 1,000-pound beef cow-calf unit is estimated at 60 pounds daily. A 1,000-pound lactating dairy cow handled as solid manure is estimated at 106 pounds.
How much manure storage do I need?
This calculator estimates waste weight. Storage volume still depends on bedding, moisture, density, handling, and removal frequency, so use the result with local extension or conservation-service design guidance.
Plan the rest of the barn
BaleMath is free to use. Numbers are planning estimates, not professional storage, engineering, or nutrient-management advice.