Understanding profit margins in Indian dairy
The Indian milk delivery business looks simple from the outside — buy low, sell high, deliver in the morning. The reality is thinner: after procurement, fuel, packaging, spoilage and unpaid customer dues, net margins of 5% to 15% are typical for raw milk sellers. The good news is that the business is sticky (customers rarely change milkmen), volume compounds, and add-on products improve the overall mix dramatically.
Typical margins in Indian dairy
- Raw milk (cow): 5%–10% net margin after all costs
- Raw milk (buffalo): 8%–12% due to higher price point
- Curd / dahi (home-set): 15%–25% margin
- Paneer: 20%–30% margin if processed in-house
- Ghee: 30%–40% margin — best margin product in dairy
Hidden costs that kill dairy profit
Most small dairy owners track revenue carefully but lose profit to costs they never write down. The biggest ones are:
- Uncollected dues (udhaar): A single customer with a ₹5,000 unpaid bill wipes out a week of net profit.
- Spoilage: 2%–5% of milk typically sours or spills. At ₹50/L this is ₹60–₹150 lost per day on a 120 L route.
- Rounding / kacha hisaab: Cash payments get mentally rounded down. Over a month this is easily ₹1,000–₹2,000.
- Seasonal dips: Summer reduces supply and raises procurement cost; monsoon spoils more milk.
- Packaging waste: Poly bags and crates cost ₹0.50–₹1.00 per delivery — factor this in.
How to improve margin without raising prices
Before you consider a price hike (which risks losing customers), improve these three levers first:
- Route density: More deliveries per km means lower fuel cost per litre. A tight 100-customer route is more profitable than a sprawling 120-customer route.
- Collection rate: Shift from monthly to weekly or 10-day billing. Outstanding balance drops dramatically and cash flow improves.
- Add-on products: Offer curd, ghee and paneer to existing customers. You already have the route and relationship — margin is much higher than raw milk.
This calculator gives you a quick forward model, but the real profit is hiding in the actuals. Start recording every delivery, every payment and every expense — that is where the numbers get honest.