Commercial agriculture is farming where crops and livestock are produced primarily for sale in markets rather than for the farmer's own consumption, typically using mechanization, large landholdings, and economies of scale (AP Human Geography Unit 5, EK PSO-5.C.1 and PSO-5.C.3).
Commercial agriculture is farming for profit. The farmer grows wheat, raises cattle, or produces soybeans to sell into a market, not to feed their own family. That single distinction (sell it vs. eat it) is how the CED divides the entire agricultural world in EK PSO-5.C.1, where production regions are defined by how subsistence or commercial they are.
Because the goal is profit, commercial farms chase efficiency. They use mechanization (tractors, combines, GPS-guided equipment), chemical inputs, biotechnology, and huge landholdings to lower the cost per unit of output. That's why commercial agriculture goes hand in hand with monoculture (planting one crop over massive areas) and with economies of scale (EK PSO-5.C.5). It's also why large commercial operations are steadily replacing small family farms in developed countries (EK PSO-5.C.3), a shift the College Board loves to ask about. Commercial agriculture can be intensive (market gardening near cities, mixed crop/livestock) or extensive (ranching, large-scale grain farming), so don't assume commercial automatically means intensive.
Commercial agriculture is the spine of Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land-Use Patterns and Processes. It directly supports learning objectives 5.6.A and 5.7.A (explain how economic forces influence agricultural practices), 5.9.A (interdependence among regions of production and consumption), and 5.11.A (challenges of contemporary agriculture). The subsistence-vs-commercial divide is the organizing axis for agricultural production regions, and almost every other Unit 5 concept hangs off it. Commodity chains, agribusiness, bid-rent theory, the Green Revolution debates, and export dependency all assume you already know what commercial agriculture is. If you can explain why a profit motive pushes farms toward bigger size, fewer crops, and more technology, half of Unit 5 falls into place.
Keep studying AP Human Geography Unit 5
Subsistence Agriculture (Unit 5)
These are the two poles of EK PSO-5.C.1. Subsistence farmers grow food to eat; commercial farmers grow food to sell. On the exam, the subsistence-commercial split usually maps onto a developing-vs-developed-country pattern, though it's a spectrum, not a clean line.
Bid-Rent Theory (Unit 5)
EK PSO-5.C.2 ties land cost to farming style. Commercial farms near cities pay high rents, so they farm intensively (think market gardening), while commercial farms far from markets go extensive (ranching, grain). Bid-rent explains where each type of commercial agriculture shows up on the map, which is also the logic behind von Thünen's model.
Second Agricultural Revolution (Unit 5)
Commercial agriculture at scale only became possible after mechanization and new technology boosted food output (EK SPS-5.C.1). The Second Agricultural Revolution freed workers from farms for factory jobs, linking Unit 5 directly to industrialization in Unit 7.
Global Supply Chains and Commodity Chains (Unit 5)
Commercial agriculture feeds a global system (EK PSO-5.E.1 and PSO-5.C.4). A coffee bean grown in Ethiopia and sold in a Seattle café traces a commodity chain, and some countries become dependent on one or two export crops (EK PSO-5.E.2), which connects to dependency ideas in Unit 7.
This term shows up everywhere in Unit 5 questions. Multiple-choice stems test whether you can spot the consequences of commercial agriculture, like the demographic and cultural effects of large operations replacing family farms, or identify a commodity chain when given a product's journey from farm to consumer. On FRQs, the College Board uses commercial agriculture as the backdrop for bigger arguments. The 2022 SAQ asked how changes in agricultural production and food processing reshaped developed countries, the 2024 SAQ asked about food availability for a growing population, and the 2026 FRQ used soybean export data from Paraguay, a classic export-commodity setup. Your job is rarely just to define the term. You need to explain effects (on farm size, rural population, diets, environment) and connect it to scale, trade, and sustainability debates from Topic 5.11.
The difference is the destination of the food. Commercial agriculture produces for the market; subsistence agriculture produces for the farmer's own household. Don't confuse this with the intensive-vs-extensive split, which is about labor and land inputs. Both commercial and subsistence farming can be either intensive or extensive. Market gardening is intensive commercial, ranching is extensive commercial, rice paddies in monsoon Asia are intensive subsistence, and shifting cultivation is extensive subsistence.
Commercial agriculture means producing crops and livestock for sale and profit, while subsistence agriculture means producing food for the farmer's own consumption.
Commercial agriculture relies on mechanization, technology, and economies of scale, which is why large operations are replacing small family farms (EK PSO-5.C.3).
Commercial does not equal intensive; ranching and large-scale grain farming are extensive commercial practices, while market gardening is intensive commercial.
Commercial farms often practice monoculture, which raises efficiency but fuels the sustainability and biodiversity debates in Topic 5.11.
Commercial agriculture connects regions through global commodity chains, and some countries become dependent on one or two export commodities (EK PSO-5.E.2).
Technology in commercial agriculture has increased the carrying capacity of land (EK PSO-5.C.5), a direct link to population concepts in Unit 2.
Commercial agriculture is farming aimed at selling products in a market for profit rather than feeding the farmer's family. It typically features mechanization, large landholdings, monoculture, and economies of scale, and it dominates in more developed countries.
No. Commercial vs. subsistence is about who the food is for, while intensive vs. extensive is about how much labor and capital go into each unit of land. Ranching is extensive commercial agriculture, and rice farming in monsoon Asia is intensive subsistence agriculture, so the two splits are independent.
Commercial farmers grow food to sell; subsistence farmers grow food to eat. The CED (EK PSO-5.C.1) defines agricultural production regions by where they fall on this spectrum, with commercial practices concentrated in developed countries and subsistence practices in many developing regions.
Market gardening, plantation agriculture, mixed crop/livestock systems, ranching, large-scale grain farming, and dairying are all commercial. Plantation agriculture is a useful exam example because it's commercial farming located in developing countries but typically serving export markets in developed ones.
Technology creates economies of scale, so bigger operations produce food at a lower cost per unit and can undercut small farms (EK PSO-5.C.3 and PSO-5.C.5). Exam questions often ask about the ripple effects, like rural depopulation and the loss of traditional farming communities.