Animal & Artisan Guide
Stardew Valley Animal Profit Guide: Barn vs Coop, Best Animals & Artisan Strategy
A complete guide to animal profits in Stardew Valley. Compare barn vs coop earnings, rank every animal by gold per day, and learn how to maximize income with artisan goods, auto-petters, and optimal barn layouts.
Table of contents
3) Every animal ranked by gold per day
This ranking uses effective daily gold — the average income per animal per day across a full year, accounting for winter downtime (pigs), processing into artisan goods, and realistic quality distributions at max hearts. All values assume the Artisan profession (+40% on processed goods).
🐷 Pig
~1,000–1,400g/day*
Truffles sell for 625g base. With Gatherer (chance to double) and Botanist (always iridium), a single pig averages 1-2 truffles per day outdoors. Truffle oil (via oil maker) sells for 1,491g with Artisan. The catch: zero production in winter and rainy days, so the yearly average drops to roughly 750-1,050g/day effective.
*Spring/Summer/Fall outdoor days only. Yearly effective is lower.
🐄 Cow
~350–560g/day
Large milk (at max hearts) into cheese yields 336g base, 470g with Artisan. Gold and iridium quality cheese pushes this higher. Cows produce every day, all year, making them the most reliable barn animal. No seasonal gaps, no weather dependency.
🐐 Goat
~200–400g/day
Large goat milk into goat cheese sells for 560g with Artisan at base quality. The problem: goats only produce every other day, cutting effective daily income in half. Still decent, but cows beat them on consistency.
🦆 Duck
~180–300g/day
Duck eggs into duck mayo sell for 525g with Artisan. Ducks produce every other day, with occasional duck feathers (1,250g) as a bonus. The feather drops make ducks the best coop animal for raw value, though inconsistent.
🐔 Chicken
~150–250g/day
Large eggs into mayo sell for 285g with Artisan. Chickens produce daily and are the cheapest animal to acquire (800g or free from events). They're the workhorse of early-game animal income — not flashy, but dependable.
🐇 Rabbit
~120–220g/day
Wool (every few days) plus occasional rabbit's foot drops (rare, but valuable at 565g base). Rabbits are more of a utility animal — the rabbit's foot is needed for a secret bundle and makes a great gift. Profit-wise, they trail chickens and ducks.
🐑 Sheep
~100–200g/day
Wool into cloth (via loom) sells for 658g with Artisan, but sheep only produce wool every 3 days (2 with Shepherd profession). The per-day average is modest. Sheep are better as a supplement than a primary income source.
The takeaway: pigs dominate when they can work, cows are the all-season backbone, and chickens are the best early-game value. For crop-focused players looking to add animals, start with cows and chickens, then add pigs when you have a deluxe barn.
1) Why animals matter for your farm economy
Crops get most of the attention in profit discussions, and for good reason — they scale fast and pair beautifully with kegs and preserve jars. But animals solve a problem crops can't: consistent, year-round income that doesn't depend on planting cycles or season transitions.
Once your barn or coop is upgraded and your animals are at full hearts, they produce every single day (with one notable exception we'll cover). That means gold flowing in during winter when your fields are empty, during festival days when you can't harvest, and during those awkward 2-3 day gaps between seasons when nothing is growing.
The real power of animals shows up when you combine them with artisan processing. A single cow producing large milk every day, turned into gold-quality cheese, generates a quiet but relentless income stream. Multiply that across a full deluxe barn and you're looking at serious passive gold.
If you're already optimizing your crop pipeline with our Crop Profit Calculator, animals are the natural next layer. They don't compete with your fields — they complement them.
2) Barn vs coop: cost, capacity & return on investment
Before buying animals, you need a building. Here's how the two paths compare from an investment perspective.
The coop is cheaper and faster to get running. If you're in Year 1 and need income now, a coop with chickens is a solid first step — eggs into mayo machines start paying back quickly. But if you're planning for maximum long-term profit, the barn is where the real money lives, especially once you unlock pigs.
ROI rule of thumb
A deluxe coop with 12 chickens producing mayo pays back its building cost in roughly 25-30 days. A deluxe barn with pigs can pay back faster in spring/summer/fall, but the winter gap extends the effective payback. For a balanced approach, build the coop first, then add a barn once you have stable crop income.