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Levy and End Point Royalty (EPR) deductions
Levy and End Point Royalty (EPR) deductions
Updated over a week ago

Within Dashboard > Reports > Post Payment Deduction Report

  • View all payment deductions that have been made against your Deliveries, including levies and royalties.

  • Easily export a report of the entire Payment Deduction data set.

These deductions are calculated as follows:

After the price per tonne has been adjusted based on location differentials and payment scales, the overall value of the delivery will be subject to levies and end point royalty deductions.


Levy Deduction (DAWR/DAFF)

The levy deduction is calculated as a percentage of the farm gate value and the rate depends on the commodity.

The farm gate value is calculated as the sale value (per tonne) minus a fixed constant that represents storage, handling, freight, and 'free on board' costs. AgriDigital has set this constant as $25. Consequently, the levy deduction can be calculated as follows:

💡Levy = (Post Adjusted Sale Value per tonne - $25) x Total levy rate x Quantity delivered (metric tonnes).

This value will be deducted from the total value of the sale.

​For more information regarding the Australian Government DAFF levies please click on the button below to be taken to their official website.



End Point Royalty (EPR) Deduction

Each variety will have its own EPR rate per metric tonne. The EPR deduction is therefore calculated as the rate that corresponds to the variety in question multiplied by the quantity (in metric tonnes) that is exchanged in the delivery.

Declaring Primary Producer status on contracted goods

When creating a Contract, a user can declare who the primary producer of the contracted goods is for the purposes of determining levies and royalties.

When creating a Purchase/Sale Contract the following tick box option will appear:

State specific levies (SA)

When grain is sold, the purchaser is required to deduct the following amounts:

  • 20 cents per tonne from the proceeds of sale of all grain purchased towards the Grain Industry Fund (GIF Levy) – change from 31 cents to 20 cents as of 1 July 2023.

  • 30 cents per tonne from the proceeds of sale of all grain purchased towards the Grain Industry Research and Development Fund (GIRDF Levy).

    This only applies to grain grown in South Australia.

    For more information regarding the South Australian specific levies please please click on the button below to be taken to their official website.



State specific levies (WA)

The Grains, Seeds and Hay Industry Funding Scheme (IFS) commenced on 1 July 2010 to address pest and disease threats relevant to the WA grains/seed/hay industry.

The scheme collects the following IFS Levy contributions from growers: 25 cents per tonne of grain and seed, and 12.5 cents per tonne of hay. The contribution applies only to the first sale of produce grown in the agricultural areas of WA*.

The contributions fund programs to manage skeleton weed and eradicate three-horned bedstraw, and may also be used to manage potential future incursions of other pests/diseases that are a priority to the industry. The scheme operates in the agricultural areas of WA*.

*Defined to include all local government districts of WA except for those comprising the Kimberley (Broome, Halls Creek, Derby-West Kimberley and Wyndham-East Kimberley) and the pastoral area (Ashburton, Carnarvon, Coolgardie, Cue, Dundas, East Pilbara, Exmouth, Laverton, Leonora, Kalgoorlie-Boulder, Meekatharra, Menzies, Mount Magnet, Murchison, Ngaanyatjarraku, Port Hedland, Roebourne, Sandstone, Shark Bay, Upper Gascoyne, Wiluna and Yalgoo).

​For more information regarding the Western Australian specific levies please please click on the button below to be taken to their official website.

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