What to do
Cash comes from selling wood. Improve cash per minute by measuring a consistent wood run, confirming the cash gained from a known sale, and investing only when an axe or plot choice improves the next cycle enough to justify its cost.
Measure wood per minute, cash per wood, active farming, and upgrade payback to improve cash income in My Wood Farm without guessed rates.
Cash comes from selling wood. Improve cash per minute by measuring a consistent wood run, confirming the cash gained from a known sale, and investing only when an axe or plot choice improves the next cycle enough to justify its cost.
Keep conditions comparable and use the values shown by your current farm.
Decide whether the session is for cash now, a specific upgrade, plot expansion, or offline production. A single target makes it easier to know when the current route has produced enough and prevents random spending.
Record starting wood, farm a consistent route for a fixed duration, and subtract the starting amount from the ending amount. Divide by minutes. Use a longer test when movement or tree availability makes short samples noisy.
Tip: Repeat the sample twice. A result that changes sharply may mean the route or conditions were not comparable.
Record cash, sell a known amount of wood, then record cash again. Divide the cash gain by wood sold. Use the observed value in the calculator instead of assuming that another player, update, or plot has the same sale conditions.
Estimate how much a candidate upgrade adds to wood per minute. Multiply the extra wood rate by cash per wood to find extra cash per minute, then compare the upgrade cost. Prefer a purchase that pays back inside the amount of time you expect to keep farming.
If cash per minute is not improving, separate the two inputs: test wood per minute first, then sell a known wood amount to check cash per wood. The weaker result shows which part of the loop needs attention.
Short pauses or a different tree route can distort the result. Confirm important decisions with another sample.
If you upgrade an axe and expand the plot at once, you cannot identify which change improved production.
A large wood total matters only when the sale step converts it into useful cash at the value you actually observe.
Sell wood, measure wood per minute and cash per wood, then prioritize the upgrade with the best observed gain for its cost.
There is no verified universal benchmark. Compare against your own previous rate under similar conditions.
No verified tree value table was available. Test known quantities and avoid assuming visual rarity equals better cash.
Use active farming when you can play and measure offline returns over your normal breaks. Compare both in the wood and cash planner.