Understanding Milk Fat and SNF — Why Dairies Pay More for Quality
08 Jul 2026 • Falah Enterprises
If you sell milk to a dairy or collection center, you've likely noticed your payment isn't based on volume alone — fat and SNF percentages affect the price per litre. Here's what these numbers actually mean and why they matter financially.
What is Fat%?
Milk fat is exactly what it sounds like — the fat content of the milk, usually expressed as a percentage. It's one of the most visible quality measures and directly affects both price and the milk's suitability for products like ghee and butter.
What is SNF?
SNF (Solids-Not-Fat) covers everything else solid in milk besides fat — mainly protein, lactose and minerals. It's a broader indicator of overall milk quality and nutritional density.
Why dairies pay based on these numbers
A litre of milk with higher fat and SNF contains more actual nutritional and processing value than a litre that's more diluted or lower in solids, even if the volume is identical. Dairies price accordingly because their end products (ghee, paneer, milk powder, etc.) depend on solids content, not just volume.
How feeding affects fat and SNF
- Fat responds strongly to fibre balance — adequate dry fodder alongside concentrate supports normal fat percentage; very low-fibre diets (like unrestricted lush spring grazing) can reduce it
- SNF responds to overall protein and energy adequacy — underfeeding relative to milk yield is a common cause of low SNF
See our detailed guides on low milk fat and low SNF causes and corrections.
The practical takeaway
Feeding correctly — matched quantity, adequate fibre, consistent quality — doesn't just support milk volume, it supports the fat and SNF percentages that determine your actual price per litre. Two farms with identical milk volume can have meaningfully different income if one has better milk composition.
For feed guidance aimed at improving milk quality, not just quantity, call or WhatsApp Falah Enterprises, Anantnag.
