Banana: Yield Per Hectare by Region

Category: agricultural-economic Updated: 2026-02-25 Topic: banana

Cavendish banana yields in optimized Latin American export plantations reach 40–60 tonnes per hectare annually — among the highest caloric yields of any crop. Smallholder farms in sub-Saharan Africa average 5–8 tonnes per hectare, limited by disease and low inputs.

Yield per hectare is one of the most important metrics in agricultural economics — it determines how much land must be converted to feed a given population, how profitable a crop is for a farmer, and how resilient a production system is to disease or climate shocks. The 🍌 banana displays one of the most extreme yield gaps of any major crop: a tenfold difference between the best and worst production systems.

Yield by Region and Farming System

Region / CountryYield (t/ha/year)Farming SystemInput Level
Ecuador (export plantations)35–45Large-scale monocultureHigh (irrigation, fungicides, tissue culture)
Costa Rica (export plantations)40–60Large-scale monocultureVery high
Colombia (export)30–40Mixed plantationHigh
Philippines (Mindanao export)30–45Large plantationHigh
India (south)25–35Smallholder, some commercialModerate
Uganda6–10Smallholder, rain-fedLow
Tanzania5–8Smallholder, rain-fedLow
DR Congo4–7Subsistence smallholderVery low
World average~17–20

Sources: FAO FAOSTAT (2022), IITA research trials.

Why Latin American Yields Are So High

Costa Rica and Ecuador’s plantation yields of 40–60 t/ha result from a deliberate, capital-intensive production system:

Tissue culture planting material. Certified disease-free tissue culture plantlets replace vegetative suckers, ensuring uniform, vigorous plant establishment and eliminating planting-material-borne pathogens.

Drip and flood irrigation. Even in high-rainfall zones, supplemental irrigation during dry spells prevents water stress at critical flowering and bunch-filling stages.

Intensive fungicide programs. Black Sigatoka (Pseudocercospora fijiensis) — the most economically damaging banana disease globally — is controlled by aerial fungicide applications, sometimes 30–50 sprays per year. Without these, yield losses of 30–50% would be typical.

High-density planting. Commercial plantations plant 1,500–2,000 plants per hectare and manage plant density through controlled deleafing and propping.

Why African Yields Are Low

Sub-Saharan African banana systems — which feed hundreds of millions of people — face a cascade of constraints:

ConstraintImpact on Yield
Fusarium wilt (Panama disease)Kills plants, forces field abandonment
Black SigatokaReduces photosynthetic area, lowers bunch weight
Banana Xanthomonas wilt (BXW)Destroys entire plantings, spreads person-to-person
Low fertilizer useNutrient depletion under continuous cropping
DroughtNo irrigation; yield drops sharply in dry seasons

IITA and Bioversity International research programs are developing disease-resistant varieties (including some GMO candidates) specifically for African smallholder contexts.

Caloric Yield: Bananas vs. Other Crops

🍌 Bananas are exceptional in caloric output per hectare. At 89 kcal/100g and yields of 40 t/ha, a commercial plantation produces approximately 35.6 million kcal per hectare per year.

CropAverage Yield (t/ha)Edible Fraction kcal/kgCalories per Hectare (millions)
Banana (commercial)4089035.6
Maize5.53,65020.1
Rice (milled)3.03,60010.8
Wheat3.53,32011.6
Potato2077015.4

Only sugar cane exceeds bananas in raw caloric output per hectare, but sugar delivers essentially no micronutrients. Bananas combine high caloric yield with meaningful potassium, vitamin B6, and vitamin C content.

🍌🍌🍌

🍌 🍌 🍌

Sources

← All banana pages · Dashboard