How to use this page
Choosing the right farm tractor comes down to a handful of decisions, and this page walks you through them in the order that matters most. Get those right and you end up with a machine that suits the work and the budget, without the expensive surprises that tend to show up after delivery. When you are ready, a single brief puts your spec in front of several verified Australian suppliers at once, so every quote you compare is built on the same requirements.
Cost breakdown
Farm tractors for sale in Australia: prices and cost breakdown
Farm tractors for sale in Australia run from about $20,000 to $150,000 or more, averaging around $85,000. Size class sets the starting point; drive type, cab, transmission, a front-end loader, and whether you buy new or used move it from there. It pays to compare farm tractor quotes from a few Australian suppliers before you commit.
| Size class | Typical price AUD, GST inclusive, Australian supplier | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| Sub-compact (under 25 hp) | $20,000 - $35,000 | Smaller working properties: mowing, light loader work, towing |
| Compact (25 - 50 hp) | $30,000 - $60,000 | Small properties and livestock: loader, slasher, light 3-point work |
| Utility (50 - 110 hp) | $55,000 - $110,000 | Most common on Australian working farms: hay, loader, heavier 3-point linkage |
| High-horsepower (110 hp+) | $110,000+ | Broadacre and cropping: tillage, seeding, spraying. Price climbs steeply with horsepower, cab, and implements |
Common setups
Common farm tractor setups by size and workload
Most buyers land on one of these three. Find the one closest to your work, then use the sections below to fine-tune the spec before you send for quotes.
Buyers comparing small tractors, small farm tractors, and compact tractors should not choose on horsepower or price alone. Check that the tractor has the traction you need, often 4WD, plus the power take-off horsepower and 3-point linkage compatibility to run the implements and jobs you plan to do.
Drive and transmission
Drive and transmission
One connected decision: how the tractor puts power to the ground. 2WD or 4WD, and the transmission, set your traction, your loader ability, and how the tractor feels over a full day. Settle this before you fine-tune implements.
| Transmission | How it drives | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Gear / synchro | Manual clutch, shift through gears. Simple and cheap to maintain. | Set-speed field work, towing, budget buyers |
| Hydrostatic | Foot-pedal speed, no clutching, easy direction changes. | Loader work, mowing, stop-start jobs, compacts |
| Powershift | Shift under load without clutching, holds speed under draft. | Utility and broadacre: tillage and haulage |
| Continuously variable transmission | Stepless speed, sets engine and ground speed apart. Most efficient under load. | High-horsepower cropping where fuel adds up |
Linkage and implements
Linkage, power take-off and implements
If you are after a tractor with a front-end loader, the loader and the gear you hang off the back change the spec and the price as much as the tractor itself. Get these clear so Australian suppliers quote a tractor that does your work, not just one that looks right on paper.
- Front-end loader: for a loader-ready tractor, the numbers that matter are lift capacity (how much it lifts and how high), the hydraulics that feed it, and the counterweight that keeps the back end planted. Quote the loader, counterweight, and any 4-in-1 bucket as separate line items, not one bundled figure.
- 3-point linkage: match the linkage category to your implements. Cat 1 suits compact tractors, Cat 2 most mid-size tractors, Cat 3 the largest units. The wrong category means your implements will not fit.
- power take-off horsepower: this drives slashers, mowers, balers, and pumps. Engine hp is not the same as power take-off hp. Tell suppliers the heaviest power take-off implement you run.
- Hydraulic remotes: rear remotes run tipping trailers, log splitters, and hydraulic implements. Count how many you need, because adding them later costs more.
Cab or open station
Cab or open station
The operator environment is a real fork in price and comfort. An open station with rollover protection (rollover protection) is lighter and cheaper. An enclosed cab adds climate control and shuts out dust and spray for long days. Pick on your hours, your climate, and your jobs.
New or used
New vs used tractors for sale
Plenty of used tractors for sale hold up well, so a strong used market sits alongside new, ex-demo, and refurbished units from verified suppliers. The right call comes down to hours, service history, and how closely the spec matches your work, which is easiest to weigh when you compare dealer-backed quotes side by side.
Ownership costs
Ownership costs
The purchase price is the start. Servicing, fuel, tyres, and how close your dealer sits all feed into what the tractor costs to run over its life.
| Cost area | What to expect | What moves it |
|---|---|---|
| Servicing | Scheduled services at set hour intervals, plus filters and fluids. | Hours worked, engine size, and in-house vs dealer servicing |
| Fuel and AdBlue | Diesel is the main running cost, and primary producers can often claim fuel tax credits for off-road diesel. Newer tractors with emissions controls also use AdBlue. | Engine size, hours, and how hard you work it under load |
| Tyres | Ag (R1), turf (R3), or industrial (R4) tyres wear and price differently. | Tyre type, ground conditions, and road vs paddock hours |
| Parts and dealer support | Downtime in season is the hidden cost. A nearby dealer with parts and service matters. | Brand support network and distance to the nearest service agent |
Before you quote
Decide before you quote
You do not need every spec nailed down to get useful quotes. Pin these five down and suppliers can price the right tractor the first time, instead of sending back a guess.
| 1 | Power and main job: your horsepower range and the work it mostly does, from loader and slashing to hay or tillage. This sets the size class. |
| 2 | Drive and transmission: 2WD or 4WD, and whether you want hydrostatic, synchro, powershift, or continuously variable transmission, based on your ground and your jobs. |
| 3 | Loader and implements: whether you need a front-end loader, your 3-point linkage category, your power take-off horsepower, and how many hydraulic remotes. |
| 4 | Cab or rollover protection: open station or enclosed cab, set by your hours, climate, and dust. Note shed and doorway clearance for a cab. |
| 5 | New, used, or budget basis: new or used, whether you are comparing on purchase price or monthly finance, and your delivery location. |
Finance options
Finance options
A farm tractor is a large upfront cost, and a loader and implements add to it. To spread that into a regular repayment, many buyers weigh equipment finance alongside the quote comparison. What finance looks like for your farm comes down to the answers below. It is also worth checking how the purchase sits under the ATO small business depreciation rules.
| Finance question | What it helps you decide | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| What could the repayment be? | Whether the tractor fits your cash flow before committing to a quote. | Tractors sit in a price range where a regular repayment is easier to weigh against the work it does than the upfront cost alone. |
| Am I likely to get approved? | Whether your business, trading history, and the tractor's value are financeable. | IndustrySearch finance works across a panel of lenders, which can improve the chance of finding a suitable approval pathway. |
| Which finance structure suits the purchase? | Whether to compare chattel mortgage, lease, rental, balloon payment, or seasonal-payment options. | The right structure can affect ownership, cash flow, and how repayments line up with your income through the year. |
Finance calculator
Estimate my repayment
Adjust the sliders to estimate your farm tractor repayments. Speak with our team for an exact quote based on your profile.
Estimate only, not an offer of finance. Compare quotes and finance options for farm tractors.
Need finance before choosing a farm tractor?
Check indicative farm tractor finance options in under a minute, with no obligation.
Common questions
Farm tractor questions buyers commonly ask
Quick answers to the most-searched questions about farm tractors and how IndustrySearch works.
Why use IndustrySearch to buy a farm tractor?
Most buyers want to compare a few quotes before committing to a tractor this expensive, and the loader, transmission, and cab make those quotes harder to line up. IndustrySearch gets you 3+ quotes from verified Australian suppliers in one go, so you can compare horsepower, drive, loader, cab, lead time, and dealer support side by side without ringing around dealers one by one.
Does it cost more to buy a tractor through IndustrySearch?
No. The service is free for buyers, and suppliers quote you their normal direct prices with no markup. Getting multiple quotes side by side often sharpens pricing because suppliers know they are competing for your job.
Why do suppliers list with IndustrySearch?
IndustrySearch has connected Australian buyers with industrial and agricultural equipment suppliers since 2005. Suppliers list with us because they get pre-qualified leads from buyers who are actively in market, rather than tyre-kickers from generic search. Every supplier is vetted before listing, so you only see reputable Australian brands with the service capability to back up what they sell.
What size tractor do I need?
Match horsepower to your main job. Under 50 hp suits property work, mowing, and light loader duty. 50 to 110 hp covers most mixed farming, hay, and heavier loader and 3-point work. 110 hp+ is broadacre territory for tillage, seeding, and spraying. Tell suppliers your heaviest power take-off implement and your loader needs so they size it right.
What is the difference between a small tractor and a compact tractor?
Compact tractors usually sit below the larger utility class, suited to acreage, livestock, mowing, and light implement work. Small tractors is a buyer-friendly way to describe those smaller machines without a strict horsepower line. Before choosing, compare horsepower, 4WD, power take-off horsepower, linkage category, and the attachments you plan to run.
Do I need 4WD?
Most working farms do. 4WD gives the grip for loader work, slopes, and wet paddocks, and it is the standard setup for mixed farming. 2WD suits flat, dry, light work and costs less to buy and service. If you run a loader, lean towards 4WD.
What is the difference between engine hp and power take-off hp?
Engine hp is the total power the engine makes. Power take-off hp is what actually reaches the implement after driveline losses, often around 80 to 90% of engine hp. Size your slashers, mowers, and balers off power take-off hp, not the engine figure, so the tractor can drive them.
How many hours is too many on a used tractor?
Hours matter less than service history and how the tractor was used. A well-serviced unit at higher hours can beat a neglected low-hour one. Many tractors stay productive well beyond 10,000 hours when properly maintained. Check the engine, hydraulics, loader, and tyres, not just the meter.
Do I need a licence to operate a farm tractor?
Not to operate one on your own farm. Driving on public roads brings in registration and licensing rules that vary by state, so check with your state transport authority before you take it on the road. Whatever you buy, keep rollover protection and the seatbelt in use, as they are the key safety basics on a tractor.
How quickly can I get a tractor delivered?
In-stock units from Australian dealers can arrive within 1-2 weeks, including pre-delivery checks. Used and ex-demo are often fastest. Built-to-order new units, especially with a loader and implements fitted, can take longer. Ask each supplier what is in stock against your spec before you finalise it.
How long does finance pre-approval take?
Equipment finance pre-approval is usually quick, often within a few business days once you provide basic business and financial details. Pre-approval lets you compare quotes knowing your repayment and borrowing capacity, without committing to a purchase.
What documents do I need to apply for equipment finance?
For most equipment finance under a set threshold, lenders ask for limited paperwork: your business ABN and trading history, recent bank statements, and details of the tractor being financed. Larger amounts can need business financials or tax returns. IndustrySearch finance works across a panel of lenders, so the exact requirements vary by amount and lender.
Why IndustrySearch
Why buyers choose IndustrySearch
Helping Australian industrial buyers compare suppliers since 2005.
