Here's the short answer: custom-exempt processing is for the owner of the live animal β it cannot be used to sell packaged beef to the general public. USDA-inspected processing is required for any retail sale, any shipment across state lines, and any situation where the buyer did not already own the live animal. If you're building a DTC beef operation, you need USDA inspection. Full stop.
Quick Answer
Custom-exempt processing is a federal exemption that lets a processor slaughter and cut animals without on-site USDA inspection β but only when the product returns to the owner of the live animal. The meat must be labeled "NOT FOR SALE" and cannot be sold, shipped, or donated. USDA-inspected processing is required for any retail sale, any shipment across state lines, or any buyer who didn't already own the live animal before slaughter. For most DTC beef operations, USDA inspection is the only legal path.
That's the headline. The details matter a lot, though β especially around beef shares, which sit in a gray zone that trips up a lot of ranchers. This article walks through exactly what each type of processing allows, what it costs, and how to make the right call for your operation.
What is custom-exempt processing?
Custom-exempt (also called custom-killed or custom-slaughter) is a specific exemption under the Federal Meat Inspection Act (FMIA) that allows a processing facility to slaughter and cut livestock without a USDA inspector present β provided the resulting product goes back exclusively to the owner of that live animal.
The exemption exists for a practical reason: a family that owns a steer and wants it butchered for their own freezer shouldn't have to use a federally inspected plant. Inspection is designed to protect commerce β it's a regulatory tool for meat that enters the marketplace. If it never enters the marketplace, the logic goes, inspection isn't required.
Custom-exempt operations are still subject to the anti-adulteration and anti-misbranding provisions of the FMIA. They must handle specified risk materials (SRMs β brain, spinal cord, etc.) correctly. They are subject to FSIS compliance reviews. The exemption from inspection is not a free pass to process meat any way they want. It's specifically and only an exemption from having a federal inspector on the kill floor.
The one absolute rule
Every single package of meat produced under custom-exempt processing must be stamped or labeled "NOT FOR SALE." This is non-negotiable. Custom-exempt product cannot be sold at retail. It cannot be shipped. It cannot be donated. It goes to the owner of the live animal, their household, and their non-paying guests β no one else.
What is USDA-inspected processing?
A USDA-inspected (federally inspected) establishment has a federal inspector on-site during slaughter and processing operations. That inspector verifies ante-mortem health of the animals, post-mortem carcass condition, facility sanitation, and labeling compliance. Only meat that passes federal inspection can bear the USDA mark of inspection β the round stamp that says "USDA INSPECTED EST. [number]."
That mark is your ticket to the marketplace. Beef that carries it can be:
- Sold at retail β whether farm-direct, farmers market, or store
- Shipped across state lines
- Sold to restaurants, food service, and institutions
- Labeled with marketing claims like "grass-fed," "no antibiotics ever," or "all-natural" (subject to FSIS claim requirements)
Many states also have state-inspected programs, which are designed to be "at least equal to" the federal standard. State-inspected meat can typically be sold within that state but not across state lines. If you ever plan to ship β even to a neighboring state β federal USDA inspection is the only path. State inspection doesn't travel.
State inspection vs. federal: the key difference
If your state has its own meat inspection program (most do), state-inspected processing lets you sell within your state β at farmers markets, direct from the farm, even to local restaurants β without going through a federal grant of inspection. The standards must be "at least equal to" federal, and state inspectors are on-site just like federal ones. But the moment you want to ship to a buyer in another state, state inspection hits a wall. Only the federal USDA mark crosses state lines. If you're selling purely local, state inspection can be a faster and more accessible entry point than federal. If you ever want to ship, you need the federal mark.
Finding a federally inspected facility near you is straightforward. The USDA FSIS Meat, Poultry and Egg Product Inspection Directory lists every federally inspected plant by state, species, and activity type. The Niche Meat Processor Assistance Network's processor finder is a more rancher-friendly version of the same data, with a searchable map and direct contact information.
What can you legally sell with custom-exempt vs. USDA?
With custom-exempt processing, you can only return product to the owner of the live animal β it cannot be sold, shipped, or donated. With USDA-inspected processing, you can sell packaged cuts retail, ship nationwide, and list product at any price. Here is the full comparison:
| Factor | Custom-Exempt | USDA-Inspected |
|---|---|---|
| Who can receive the product | Owner of live animal, their household, non-paying guests only | Anyone β retail buyers, restaurants, institutions |
| Can product be sold at retail? | No | Yes |
| Can product be shipped interstate? | No | Yes |
| Labeling requirement | Must be marked "NOT FOR SALE." No marketing claims permitted. | USDA mark of inspection required. Marketing claims allowed (with FSIS approval). |
| Inspector on-site during slaughter? | No | Yes β federally employed, taxpayer-funded |
| Typical kill fee (per head) | $50 β $100 | $60 β $120 |
| Cut & wrap fee | $0.75 β $1.40 / lb hanging weight | $0.85 β $1.50 / lb hanging weight |
| Total processing per 1,200-lb steer | $600 β $1,000 | $700 β $1,100 |
| Can processor label with farm name? | No β "NOT FOR SALE" only | Yes β approved labels with farm name, claims, contact info |
| Right channel for DTC retail? | No | Yes |
The cost difference between the two types of processing is often smaller than ranchers expect. Federal inspection is a taxpayer-funded service β you don't pay the inspector's salary. The facility bears some added compliance and record-keeping costs, but at most custom-exempt and USDA-inspected facilities, the processing fee gap is $50β$150 per head or less. For a DTC operation, that cost difference is easily recovered in the first case of ribeyes. For a detailed walkthrough of what happens inside a USDA facility β from the kill floor to your cut sheet to packaged product β see our USDA beef processing 101 guide.
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Does custom-exempt apply to beef share sales?
Yes β custom-exempt can legally apply to beef share sales, but only when buyers own the live animal before slaughter. Selling packaged beef after slaughter using a custom-exempt facility is illegal, regardless of what the arrangement is called.
This is the question that generates the most confusion β and the most legal risk. The answer is yes, custom-exempt can apply to beef shares, but only under a specific set of conditions that most "beef share" arrangements don't actually satisfy.
Here's what the regulations require: the buyers must legally own the live animal (or a defined fractional share of it) before the animal is slaughtered. Not before delivery. Not before processing. Before the kill. You are selling an interest in a live animal β not a future quantity of beef.
When done correctly, the mechanics look like this:
- You find a buyer (or buyers) who want to purchase a quarter, half, or whole animal
- You execute a bill of sale or ownership transfer document before the animal goes to slaughter
- The buyer (as the new owner) contracts directly with the processor for cut-and-wrap services and pays the processor directly for those fees
- The buyer also gives the cut sheet (their cutting order) directly to the processor β the rancher should not be providing cutting instructions on behalf of buyers
- The buyer must pick up and pay for their product at the processor β the rancher cannot deliver the finished meat
- The processor returns the packaged product to the owner β labeled "NOT FOR SALE"
- No retail sale, no retail labeling, no shipping to unrelated third parties
The 5 mistakes that turn a legal beef share into an illegal meat sale
- Selling shares after slaughter. Once the animal is dead, any transfer is a meat sale β not an animal purchase. The paperwork must happen before the kill. No exceptions.
- Charging by the pound of packaged meat. You can say "beef shares at $X per pound of live weight." You cannot say "$X per pound of take-home beef." The first is pricing a live animal. The second is pricing packaged meat β and you can't sell packaged meat without USDA inspection.
- Collecting payment for processing fees. If you collect processing fees on behalf of buyers and pay the processor yourself, you've turned their meat into your inventory. Buyers pay the processor directly.
- Delivering the finished product. The buyer must pick up their product. If you deliver it, you're transporting "not for sale" product and it looks like a sale. Have buyers go directly to the processor.
- Vague ownership documentation. "He told me he wanted a half" doesn't count. A real bill of sale identifying the specific animal, the ownership fraction, and the date of transfer β before slaughter β is the legal foundation of the whole model.
The owner exemption β what it actually says
Under USDA regulations and the 2018 FSIS Compliance Guideline for Livestock Exemptions, more than one person can jointly own an animal and still qualify for the custom-exempt owner exemption. FSIS has never set a hard cap on co-owners. Some states (Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska) have passed laws expanding herd-share and animal-share definitions β Colorado allows shares as small as 1% of a live animal. The rule of thumb used by most agricultural law attorneys: the ownership transfer must be real, documented, and in place before slaughter β and the buyers must take genuine ownership of a specific, identified animal. Vague pre-orders for future beef do not qualify. Note: FSIS has explicitly stated that herd-share arrangements structured through membership organizations likely violate the custom-exempt provisions β if you're building a co-op model, consult an ag attorney in your state before proceeding.
The National Agricultural Law Center has documented the legal ambiguity in this area carefully. The short version: the custom-exempt beef share model is legally defensible when structured correctly, but it's not a substitute for USDA inspection if you want to run a true retail DTC operation. It limits you to local buyers who are willing to participate in a documented live-animal purchase β you cannot list it on a website, ship it, or sell it to anyone who hasn't executed paperwork before slaughter.
If your DTC model involves taking orders from customers online, shipping boxes of beef, or selling cuts at a farmers market or farm stand β that's retail, and you need USDA inspection. There's no version of custom-exempt that covers it.
How do you find a USDA-inspected processor?
Two resources. Use both.
1. USDA FSIS Inspection Directory. The official Meat, Poultry and Egg Product Inspection Directory at fsis.usda.gov lists every federally inspected establishment in the country. You can search by state, filter by species (beef, pork, lamb), and filter by activity type (slaughter-only vs. full processing). Every entry includes the establishment name, address, phone number, and establishment number.
2. Niche Meat Processor Assistance Network (NMPAN). The NMPAN processor finder is built specifically for small and mid-scale producers β it includes USDA-inspected plants, state-inspected plants, and custom-exempt facilities, with notes on which operations work with direct-market producers. Many of the USDA-only plants listed in the FSIS directory primarily serve large commercial operations and won't take small lots. NMPAN helps you find processors who actually work with ranchers at your scale.
A few practical notes on the search:
- Processor availability is the number one bottleneck for DTC ranchers. In many rural regions, there are few USDA-inspected plants, and wait times for processing slots can run 6β18 months. Do not wait until you're ready to sell to start the conversation.
- Call every plant within a realistic drive radius. Ask whether they accept outside animals, what their minimum lot size is, and how far out their schedule runs. Get on waitlists even before you have animals ready.
- Some USDA plants only handle their own animals and do not offer custom processing services. Others β particularly smaller regional plants and those built for direct-market producers β are designed exactly for your situation.
What does it cost β and is it worth it?
Processing cost is a real line item, but it's not the reason to hesitate on USDA inspection. Here's the math in plain terms.
For a typical 1,200-lb commercial steer with a 60% hanging weight yield (720 lbs hanging weight, roughly 540 lbs packaged):
- Kill fee: $60 β $120 per head
- Cut and wrap (vacuum-pack): $0.85 β $1.50 per pound of hanging weight = $612 β $1,080 for a 720-lb carcass
- Total processing: $672 β $1,200 per head
Compare that to what you recover. That same steer sold retail at even conservative blended pricing ($9 β $11/lb packaged) generates $4,860 β $5,940 in gross revenue. Processing is 12β20% of that gross. It's a real cost but not a margin killer β especially when the alternative is selling the same steer at auction for $1,100 β $1,500 total.
The question "is USDA inspection worth it?" is really the wrong question. The right question is: do I have buyers, and am I set up to ship? If you have demand and the cold-chain infrastructure to fulfill orders, USDA inspection is not a barrier β it's a prerequisite you pay for once by establishing a processor relationship, and then use for every animal you sell.
If you want to run the numbers for your specific operation β your animals, your pricing, your region β use the DTC Herd Value Calculator to model your unit economics before you commit to anything. For a detailed breakdown of kill fees, cut-and-wrap rates, and what drives the total processing bill, see the Processing Cost Estimator to model your specific animal and region.
Processing cost realities by region
Processing fees vary more by region than by facility type. In the Mountain West and parts of the Great Plains, where USDA plants are sparse, fees trend toward the higher end β $1.20β$1.50/lb HW cut-and-wrap is common. In the Midwest and Southeast, where competition among inspected plants is higher, $0.85β$1.10/lb is more typical. Always get two or three quotes before committing to a processor relationship.
The bottom line: which one do you need?
If you are selling beef β or planning to β here's the decision tree:
- Selling packaged retail cuts (steaks, roasts, ground beef) to buyers who didn't own the live animal? USDA inspection required.
- Shipping beef across state lines in any form? USDA inspection required.
- Selling at a farmers market or farm stand? USDA inspection required (in almost all states).
- Selling a documented share of a specific live animal, with paperwork executed before slaughter, to a local buyer who takes direct ownership? Custom-exempt can work β but get it structured correctly.
- Processing animals purely for your own family's consumption? Custom-exempt is the right tool.
For most ranchers building a real DTC operation, the answer is USDA inspection β and the sooner you establish that processor relationship, the better. The processing capacity crunch in many regions means the ranchers who call first are the ones who get slots. Start that conversation now, not when your first animals are ready.
When you're ready to understand the full scope of what it takes to go direct β from processing infrastructure through cold chain, packaging, and buyer acquisition β the Sell Direct to Families Roadmap walks you through every stage. And if you want help building the marketing side of a DTC operation while you handle the ranching, that's what we do.
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