Why Udder Health Is a Financial Issue, Not Just a Health One
08 Jul 2026 • Falah Enterprises
It's easy to think of udder health purely as an animal welfare or veterinary topic. In reality, it's one of the most direct lines between animal management and your actual income.
The direct cost of mastitis
Mastitis (udder infection) reduces milk yield from the affected quarter, sometimes permanently even after treatment. Milk from a treated animal often cannot be sold for a withdrawal period. And treatment itself costs money. A single mastitis case can represent a meaningful income hit, not just an animal health event.
The hidden cost: subclinical cases
Not all udder problems are obvious. Subclinical mastitis — infection without visible symptoms — quietly reduces milk yield and quality without an obvious sign, meaning many farmers lose income to it without realizing the cause.
Prevention is cheaper than treatment, every time
- Clean, dry bedding (see our shed hygiene checklist)
- Proper milking hygiene — clean hands, clean equipment, clean udder before milking
- Adequate, balanced nutrition supporting overall immune function
- Prompt attention to any early signs — swelling, heat, abnormal milk
Nutrition's role in udder health
While hygiene is the primary defense, nutrition plays a supporting role — deficiencies in certain minerals and vitamins are linked to weaker immune resistance in udder tissue. A consistently well-fed animal, on a feed matched to her yield with proper mineral mixture, is in a better position to resist infection than an undernourished one.
The bottom line
Every rupee spent on shed hygiene and prevention is generally cheaper than the milk loss and treatment cost of an actual mastitis case. Treating udder health as a core part of farm economics, not a side concern, pays off directly.
For feed guidance that supports overall herd health, call or WhatsApp Falah Enterprises, Anantnag.
