Rolling pasture and farmland

Know where your animals graze.

Core shows you where your animals are. Pro tells you how your pastures are being used.

How grazing analytics works

GPS collars automatically capture movement throughout the day. You define the boundaries once, and the system does the rest.

  1. 01

    GPS location capture

    Collar devices record GPS coordinates at regular intervals, building a complete picture of animal movement throughout the day.

  2. 02

    Boundary detection

    Define your field and paddock boundaries once. The system automatically detects when animals cross into different areas.

  3. 03

    Analytics and reports

    View grazing summaries, time distributions and movement patterns. Understand how your pastures are being used.

Core: see where your animals are

Included with every plan. Real-time visibility into animal location and grazing activity.

  • Real-time GPS positions for every collared animal on your farm map.
  • Per-animal boundary visit history: which paddocks an animal has visited, when and for how long.
  • Per-boundary visit history: which animals have grazed this paddock.
  • Daily, weekly and monthly grazing time per animal and per paddock.
  • Assign animals to paddocks directly from the map.

Pro: understand how your pastures are used

Deeper analytics to optimise rotation and pasture health. Pro reads the same GPS data and turns it into decisions.

Pasture utilisation charts

Pro

Visualise grazing pressure across your farm over time.

Boundary comparison tables

Pro

Compare utilisation rates between paddocks side by side.

Insights panel

Pro

Automated insights: heavy-usage warnings, exclusion zone activity, underutilised areas.

Per-animal grazing distribution

Pro

See how each animal splits its time across your paddocks.

Common questions

The questions we hear most, answered straight.

Do I need GPS collars to use grazing analytics?

For ongoing tracking, a collar is the practical answer: grazing analytics is built on GPS data, so each animal you want to follow wears a collar that reports into Agrianta, recording coordinates at regular intervals through the day. That continuous stream is what becomes your visit history and grazing time. Agrianta is hardware-agnostic, so it works with collars you already own or choose to buy rather than tying you to one brand. If an animal isn't collared, you can still set its location manually and Agrianta matches that point to your boundaries exactly as it would a collar reading, which is a handy fallback for the odd animal, though logging a whole herd by hand isn't practical, so a collar stays the easier path. Either way, you define your field and paddock boundaries once and the system detects crossings automatically from then on.

What can I see without paying for the Pro tier?

Core, included with every plan, gives you real-time visibility into where your animals are and how they graze. You get live GPS positions for every collared animal on your farm map, plus per-animal visit history showing which paddocks an animal has been in, when and for how long. You can also see which animals have grazed a given paddock, view daily, weekly and monthly grazing time per animal and per paddock, and assign animals to paddocks directly from the map.

How does Agrianta know which field an animal is grazing?

You define your field and paddock boundaries once on the map, and the system automatically detects when an animal crosses from one area into another. Collar devices record GPS coordinates at regular intervals, so each position is matched against your boundaries to build a visit history without any manual logging. From that, you get a record of which paddocks each animal has visited, when, and for how long, alongside grazing time totals per animal and per paddock.

Can grazing data help me manage rotation and pasture health?

Yes, the Pro tier turns the same GPS data into decisions about how your pastures are used. Pasture utilisation charts visualise grazing pressure across the farm over time, and boundary comparison tables let you compare utilisation rates between paddocks side by side. An insights panel surfaces automated warnings for heavy-usage areas, exclusion zone activity and underused ground, while per-animal grazing distribution shows how each animal splits its time. Together these help you plan rotation and spot pressure before it damages a field.

Does grazing analytics work alongside boundary breach alerts?

Yes, the same boundaries you draw for grazing analytics also underpin GPS escape alerts. Because the system already detects when an animal crosses a boundary, a move outside your defined area can flag a critical breach alert, so you learn about an escape rather than discovering it on the next round. Inside your boundaries, that crossing data feeds the visit history and grazing time reports instead. One set of field and paddock definitions drives both the day-to-day analytics and the safety alerting.

Try it on your own herd.

Thirty days, every module on. You won't be charged until your trial ends, and you can cancel anytime.