Is hydroponics profitable? - Greenhouse Grower
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
  • Varieties
  • Production
  • Technology
    • Tech Briefs
  • Management
    • Top 100 Growers Lists
    • Top 100 Growers Articles
  • Events
    • GreenhouseConnect
    • Biosolutions Conference
    • Evening of Excellence at Cultivate
  • Resources
    • Digital Deep Dives
    • Webinars
    • Podcasts
    • Digital Issues
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
    • Become a Member
    • Exclusive Content
    • My Account
    • Log In
  • Mobile Social Icons
Subscribe
Zach Bruce, Hortica
Zach Bruce, Hortica

Reducing Common Greenhouse Injuries: Practical Steps to Protect Employees and Operations

Ping Yu
Ping Yu | Yan Zhang

How Organic Mulches Can Reduce Short-Spined Thrips Numbers

Justin Lombardoni
Justin Lombardoni

Cultivating the Next Generation of Growers

Jeff Neese
Jeff Neese

From Palm Pilots to AI: A Grower’s Perspective on Technology

Trending Now: "Check Out Our Latest Videos LIVE from CAST 2026"
Sponsor Content

Presented By Projar

Is hydroponics profitable?

Many farmers wonder what the productive difference is between hydroponics or soil cultivation, beyond the need to avoid edaphological limitations.

Per Álvaro Villalba, Projar’s expert in hydroponic cultivation, “Soilless crops offer harvests up to 50% higher in the first year. In this way, although hydroponic productions require, of course, a higher investment, it quickly pays off ”.

As a demonstration case of this profitability in the short term, we are going to analyze the specific case of a company in Peru, a project developed entirely by Projar, which started a hydroponic blueberry production from scratch. It was decided that part of the production would be in soil and part in hydroponics, to test and decide which method to use in larger plantations. *

With the results obtained, the observed costs were the following:

 

These costs include everything from soil preparation to plant acquisition to labor. It is important to note that in soil the planting density was 3,000 plants per hectare and in hydroponics 5,000 plants per hectare, so the cost of the plants themselves is almost double.

Once both cultivation methods were implemented, the production phase began. When it was time to harvest, the income per hectare in the first 3 years was as follows:

 

The income calculation has been carried out knowing the production obtained and taking overseas seasonal prices as a reference. In this production, the income of the hydroponic plantation in the first year was 50% higher than that of the soil plantation.

* We are talking about a production with suitable soil in which the farmer, who knew the advantages of hydroponics, wanted to verify these results.

Why are there such good returns in those first few years?

The substrate is a “more comfortable” growing medium than the soil. To begin with, the moment of planting occurs without stress, because the substrate offers an environment very similar to the one that housed the plant in the nursery. This causes the plant to start up very optimally. In addition, in a container, the roots will develop very strong and quickly.

This early development of the roots will cause the harvest to be advanced and it will be much higher in those first years. As the years go by, of course, the harvests are equalized because in the soil they end up developing well, despite the fact that the first year, more slowly.

More technical production

In addition to the productive advantages, hydroponics allows the cultivation to be made more technologically advanced, achieving greater control in production. This is where the efficiency of hydroponics resides, since it allows the farmer to provide the plant with the exact dose of water and nutrients at the right time, preventing the plant from investing much more energy in its growth and production.

Projar, with more than 15 years of experience in the market, created an advisory manual on the basics of growing with coconut fiber, which are the crops that are best adapted to hydroponic cultivation and the rapid return on investment of this system cultivation.
You can download the manual for free from this link: https://bit.ly/2HXPjh3

More from this sponsor

Sponsor: Projar

Coir Fiber, the best choice for cannabis growers

Sponsor: Projar

The keys to successful germination of the cannabis plant

SMART HYDROPONIC GROW SYSTEM
Sponsor: Projar

SMART HYDROPONIC GROW SYSTEM

The Latest

First Read

University Program Empowers Students with Practical Plant Breeding Experience

By University of California|July 7, 2026
First Read

Envu Rebrands Aliette Fungicide as Teclera

By Envu|July 7, 2026
Management

How to Find the Latest Info on New Products at Cultivate’26

By Brian D. Sparks|July 7, 2026
Events

Ball Horticultural Company Reveals New Location for CAST 2027

By Ball Horticultural Company|July 7, 2026
Crops

Dr. A Highlights Consumer’s Favorite Plants in the Southeast This Spring

By Brian D. Sparks|July 7, 2026

Greenhouse Grower

The Future of Floriculture

  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Account
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Reprint Permissions
  • Meister Media Worldwide
  • Meister Custom Business Solutions

© 2026 Meister Media Worldwide