Dairy farming is an intensive, commercial form of agriculture that raises cattle for milk and dairy products; because milk spoils quickly and transport costs are high, it historically locates close to urban markets, making it the textbook first-ring activity in von Thünen's model.
Dairy farming is raising livestock, mostly cows, to produce milk, cheese, butter, and other dairy products. In AP Human Geography terms, what matters is how it's classified. It is intensive (lots of labor and capital packed onto a relatively small amount of land) and commercial (the milk is sold for profit, not consumed by the farm family). That combination drives where it locates.
The location logic comes down to perishability. Fresh milk spoils fast, so transportation cost and time to market are huge. Historically, that pushed dairy farms into a ring around cities, an area geographers call a milkshed. This is why dairying sits in the innermost ring of von Thünen's model alongside market gardening. The catch, and the part the exam loves, is that the model assumes 1820s technology. Refrigeration, refrigerated trucks, and industrial-scale operations like CAFOs have stretched milksheds far beyond what von Thünen predicted, which is exactly the kind of "the model doesn't always hold" analysis the CED asks for (EK PSO-5.D.1).
Dairy farming lives in Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land-Use Patterns and Processes, specifically Topics 5.6 (Agricultural Production Regions) and 5.8 (The Von Thünen Model). It directly supports learning objective 5.6.A, explaining how economic forces shape agricultural practices, because dairying is a clean example of intensive practice on expensive land near markets (EK PSO-5.C.2, bid-rent theory). It also supports 5.8.A, since dairying is the go-to example for von Thünen's first ring and for explaining why transportation costs and perishability determine rural land use (EK PSO-5.D.1). If you can explain dairy farming's location, you've basically proven you understand both bid-rent and von Thünen.
Keep studying AP Human Geography Unit 5
Bid-Rent Theory (Unit 5)
Land near the market is expensive, so only farming that earns a lot per acre can afford it. Dairy farming is intensive enough to outbid extensive uses like ranching for that pricey first-ring land. Dairy's location is bid-rent theory in action.
Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) (Unit 5)
Modern dairying has shifted toward CAFOs, where thousands of cows are confined and fed in industrial facilities. This is the "dairy farming has changed significantly" angle the 2021 SAQ targeted, and it raises environmental and ethical issues you can use as FRQ evidence.
Commercial Agriculture (Unit 5)
Dairy farming is commercial by definition; the milk is a product for sale, often to processors rather than directly to consumers. That makes it part of agribusiness supply chains, linking the farm to milk processing plants and grocery distribution.
Central Business District (CBD) (Unit 6)
The same bid-rent logic that puts dairy near the rural market puts offices in the CBD. Dairy farming is your bridge between Unit 5's von Thünen rings and Unit 6's urban land-use models. Same gradient, different scale.
Multiple-choice questions almost always test dairy farming through von Thünen. Expect stems like "which agricultural activity would most likely be found closest to a central market" or "why does dairy farming appear in the first ring rather than vegetable production at the local scale." The answer always runs through perishability and transportation costs. You should be able to (1) classify dairying as intensive and commercial, (2) explain its first-ring location using transport costs, and (3) explain why modern technology like refrigeration breaks the model. The College Board has tested it directly in free response. The 2021 SAQ Q1 opened with "Dairy farming is a type of intensive agriculture" and asked about how dairying and dairy production have changed in recent decades, so be ready to discuss CAFOs, mechanization, and expanded milksheds, not just the classic model.
Both involve raising livestock, but they're opposites on the von Thünen map. Dairy farming is intensive and sits in the first ring because milk is perishable and the farm needs constant labor and capital on expensive land near the market. Ranching is extensive grazing on cheap land in the outermost ring, because live animals can walk or be shipped to market without spoiling. If an MCQ gives you "livestock near the city," think dairy; "livestock far from the city," think ranching.
Dairy farming is intensive, commercial agriculture, meaning high inputs of labor and capital on relatively small plots, with products sold for profit.
It occupies the first ring of von Thünen's model because milk is highly perishable and transportation costs to market are high.
Bid-rent theory explains why dairying can afford expensive land near the market while extensive activities like ranching cannot.
A milkshed is the zone around a city that supplies its fresh milk, and refrigeration technology has dramatically expanded milksheds beyond von Thünen's predictions.
Modern dairying has industrialized through CAFOs and mechanization, a change the 2021 SAQ asked about directly.
Dairy farming is a perfect example for explaining both why von Thünen's model works and why its 1820s assumptions break down today.
Dairy farming is the intensive, commercial raising of cattle for milk and dairy products. On the AP exam it's the classic example of first-ring agriculture in von Thünen's model, located near cities because milk spoils quickly.
Intensive. Dairy farms pack high amounts of labor and capital (milking equipment, feed, daily care) onto relatively small areas of land. The 2021 SAQ Q1 stated this outright, calling dairy farming "a type of intensive agriculture."
Because fresh milk is perishable and expensive to transport, dairy farms needed to be close to their urban market. Being intensive, dairying also generates enough revenue per acre to outbid extensive farming for costly land near the city.
Dairy farming is intensive and locates in von Thünen's first ring near the market; ranching is extensive grazing on cheap land in the outermost ring. Both raise livestock, but perishable milk demands proximity while live animals don't.
Only partly. Refrigerated trucks and rail let milk travel far beyond the traditional milkshed, and large CAFO dairies now operate far from cities. The CED (EK PSO-5.D.1) expects you to explain exactly this kind of departure from the model.