Aerial view of a completed edible oil processing plant facility, professional industrial layout showing press lines, storage tanks, refinery vessels and packaging area, modern food processing facility, clean aerial photography
6-Step Buying Decision Framework
Every successful oil plant investment follows this sequence. Skipping steps or reordering them is how buyers end up with the wrong equipment, wrong capacity, or wrong site constraints.
Everything starts here. Your raw material determines: press model, conditioning parameters, refinery stages, expected yield, and by-product value. Before talking to any supplier, establish these facts:
- Oil type: peanut / soybean / sunflower / sesame / palm kernel / rice bran / other
- Local availability: tonnes/year supply within a 50 km radius at what price
- Oil content: get a laboratory test (±1% accuracy matters for yield and ROI calculations)
- Typical FFA level: affects whether you need a full neutralisation refinery or a simpler bleach/deodorise-only system
- Seasonal variability: how does supply fluctuate month-to-month? Can you operate year-round?
Most buyers over-specify capacity. The right approach:
- Calculate your realistic monthly market: how many tonnes of oil can you actually sell (with evidence)?
- Add 15–20% buffer for growth
- Convert to TPD: Monthly sales (T) ÷ 25 operating days = Daily capacity target
- Verify against raw material supply: can you source enough seeds at an acceptable price year-round?
| Scale | Capacity (TPD) | Investment Range (FOB) | Suitable Market Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mini | 1–5 TPD | $8,000–$25,000 | Artisan/premium local market; cold-pressed; testing phase |
| Small Commercial | 5–20 TPD | $25,000–$65,000 | Town/district-level market; first commercial plant; institutional supply |
| Medium | 20–50 TPD | $65,000–$180,000 | Regional market; food manufacturing supply; branded retail |
| Large Industrial | 50+ TPD | $180,000–$500,000+ | National distribution; export markets; continuous operation |
Three levels of output configuration, each with different capital requirements and market implications. Match your configuration to your verified market demand — not your aspirations.
Investment: 100% base cost
Equipment: Cleaning → Conditioning → Pressing → Filtration → Storage
Market: Sells to downstream refineries or traditional/artisan buyers
Margin: Lowest, but lowest risk and lowest capital commitment
Investment: 140–185% of base cost
Equipment: + Batch or continuous refinery (degumming, neutralising, bleaching, deodorising)
Market: Retail, food manufacturing, export
Margin: Medium to high
Investment: 160–220% of base cost
Equipment: + Bottling/filling line, labelling, packaging automation
Market: Direct consumer retail
Margin: Highest potential — but also highest competition and brand investment required
Many projects fail not because of equipment problems but because of site problems no one checked before ordering. Verify all of these before placing any order:
The equipment FOB price is only 55–70% of total investment. Here is the complete cost picture for a 30 TPD peanut plant example:
Most buyers either choose on price alone or fail to verify supplier claims independently. Neither approach produces good outcomes. Use the structured evaluation framework in Section 2 below — then ask all 10 questions in Section 3 before committing.
The three dimensions of supplier evaluation: Technical Credibility (40%), Commercial Terms (30%), and Track Record (30%). A supplier who scores poorly on technical credibility should not be selected regardless of price — equipment that does not perform is worth less than its scrap value.
Supplier Evaluation Framework
Three weighted evaluation categories. Score each supplier honestly before making a decision. A total score below 65/100 on this framework means the risk is too high — regardless of price.
Technical Credibility
40%Commercial Terms
30%Track Record
30%10 Questions to Ask Every Supplier
These are not polite conversation starters. They are designed to surface the information that separates credible suppliers from those who will cost you far more than their initial price suggests.
6 Buying Mistakes That Create Expensive Problems
These are the six patterns that consistently produce the worst outcomes. Every one of these has been documented across real plant installations. Read them before you buy.
Split image showing correctly sized oil press with good production flow on left versus undersized bottleneck equipment causing production backup on right, industrial comparison infographic style, warning red orange tones on problem side
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the most important questions from buyers at the evaluation stage.