This NABARD Goat Farming Project Report is designed for entrepreneurs in India seeking funding between ₹2–25 Lakh under NIC 01445 (Goat Farming). A bank-ready project report is crucial for loan approval, as it demonstrates financial viability, repayment capacity, and compliance with NABARD guidelines. The report includes detailed CMA (Credit Monitoring Arrangement) data, Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) calculations, and 5-year financial projections covering income, expenditure, and cash flow. It also outlines the subsidy available under NABARD’s refinance scheme for animal husbandry, typically 25% of the project cost (up to ₹5 lakh for general category, 33% for SC/ST). The report format covers unit details, breed selection (e.g., Jamunapari, Boer), housing, feed management, health care, marketing strategy, and risk mitigation. By preparing this report, you can approach banks like NABARD-linked commercial banks, RRBs, or cooperatives for a term loan. The project is viable for small-scale farmers in states like Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and Madhya Pradesh, where goat farming is a traditional livelihood.
Any individual, group, or farmer with land or lease agreement for goat housing is eligible. Minimum 20 does and 1 buck for a commercial unit. Project cost ranges from ₹2 lakh (10 does + 1 buck + basic shed) to ₹25 lakh (100+ does with automated systems). NABARD refinances up to 90% of the loan amount. Margin money: 10-15% for general, 5% for SC/ST. Subsidy: 25% (general) or 33% (SC/ST) of project cost, capped at ₹5 lakh. Loan tenure: 5-7 years with 1-year moratorium. Interest rate: 9-12% per annum (MCLR linked).
1. Duly filled application form with passport-size photos. 2. KYC documents (Aadhaar, PAN, Voter ID). 3. Land documents (ownership/lease deed, land record). 4. Project report (this one) with CMA data and projections. 5. Quotations for goats, shed construction, equipment. 6. Bank statement of last 6 months. 7. Caste certificate (if SC/ST for subsidy). 8. Income tax returns (if applicable). 9. No objection certificate from local panchayat if required. 10. Insurance policy for goats (recommended).
1. Prepare project report with 5-year projections. 2. Visit nearest NABARD-linked bank (e.g., SBI, RRB, cooperative). 3. Submit application with documents. 4. Bank verifies land and technical feasibility. 5. Loan sanctioned (usually 30-45 days). 6. Disbursement in installments: first for shed construction, then for goat purchase. 7. Claim subsidy: bank submits claim to NABARD, amount credited to loan account. 8. Repayment starts after 1-year moratorium. 9. Regular monitoring by bank/NGO. 10. Renew insurance annually.
Every report is formatted to the exact standards required by Indian banks and government departments.
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NABARD format + goat farming economics combined correctly.
Subsidy/margin money for NABARD auto-computed.
Project cost ₹2–25 Lakh, NIC 01445.
CMA, DSCR ≥ 1.50, 5-year projections.
Editable; Word + Excel exports; first report free.
Yes — NABARD (agri capital subsidy) is commonly used for goat farming. The report is formatted to NABARD requirements with subsidy/margin money shown.
agri capital subsidy — computed automatically in the means-of-finance and subsidy sections.
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NABARD provides a capital subsidy of 25% of the project cost for general category and 33% for SC/ST, up to a maximum of ₹5 lakh. The subsidy is back-ended, meaning it is credited to your loan account after project implementation and verification. The remaining cost is covered by a term loan (up to 90% of project cost) and margin money from the borrower.
Yes, but you need a lease agreement for at least 5 years for the land where the shed will be constructed. The lease deed must be registered or notarized. Some banks may also accept a consent letter from the landowner. Additionally, you must have a proper housing plan for goats approved by the local veterinary department.
A ₹5 lakh project typically covers 20-25 does (female goats) and 1-2 bucks. Breed choice affects cost: local breeds (e.g., Black Bengal) cost ₹3,000-5,000 each, while exotic breeds (Boer, Saanen) cost ₹8,000-15,000. The shed, feeding equipment, and initial feed cost are included. With NABARD subsidy, your out-of-pocket expense could be as low as ₹50,000-75,000.
Profit depends on scale and management. For a 20-does unit, annual income from kid sales (40 kids/year at ₹3,000 each) is ₹1.2 lakh, plus milk sales (₹50/day for 200 days) ₹10,000. Expenses: feed ₹60,000, labor ₹30,000, veterinary ₹10,000. Net profit: ₹30,000-50,000/year in year 1-2, increasing to ₹1-1.5 lakh by year 5 as herd grows. DSCR typically exceeds 1.5, ensuring loan repayment.