Total Mixed Ration (TMR) for Cattle:
Complete Formulation Guide
By CattleDaily Nutrition Team | Updated 2025 | 12 min read
Total Mixed Ration (TMR) is one of the most effective feeding strategies for maximizing cattle performance by blending all feed components into a single, nutritionally uniform mixture.
Correct TMR formulation balances dry matter intake, forage-to-concentrate ratio, energy density, protein level, and key minerals to match the production stage of each group of cattle.
This guide covers the full TMR formulation process — from understanding nutrient requirements and selecting ingredients, to mixing protocols and cost analysis — for both dairy and beef operations.
Whether you're a new producer or optimizing an established feedlot, this guide provides the science-backed, actionable blueprint you need to get more out of every pound of feed.
1. What Is Total Mixed Ration (TMR)?
A Total Mixed Ration (TMR) is a feeding system in which all dietary components — forages, grains, protein supplements, by-products, minerals, vitamins, and additives — are blended together into a single, homogeneous mixture. The goal is to deliver a nutritionally complete feed in every bite the animal takes, eliminating the selective eating behavior common in component-fed cattle.
First popularized in large-scale dairy operations in the 1970s, TMR has since become the gold standard in commercial cattle nutrition. Today it is widely used across dairy, beef feedlot, stocker, and cow-calf operations worldwide.
The system requires a mixer wagon (either vertical-auger or horizontal-drum), regular forage moisture testing, and disciplined ration balancing software or calculations. The investment pays off through improved feed efficiency, better milk production, healthier rumen function, and reduced feed waste.
2. Why TMR Matters: Key Benefits
The advantage of TMR over traditional separate-component feeding goes beyond convenience. The biological benefits are substantial and well-documented in nutritional science.
Rumen Health & Stability
When all components are blended, the rumen receives a steady supply of rapidly fermentable carbohydrates alongside physically effective fiber. This stabilizes rumen pH and reduces the risk of acidosis, a leading metabolic disorder in high-producing cattle. A buffered rumen environment translates directly to better feed digestibility and animal comfort.
Prevents Selective Eating
Cattle are natural sorters. In a loose, component-based system, they preferentially eat grains and finer particles — leaving high-fiber forages behind. This leads to diets that are too energy-dense and low in effective fiber, causing subclinical acidosis and reduced butterfat in dairy cows. TMR eliminates this by making separation virtually impossible.
Improved Labour Efficiency
Delivering a single mixture once or twice daily requires fewer feeding passes compared to offering multiple feed components separately. This reduces labour costs, especially on larger operations managing hundreds or thousands of head.
3. Understanding Cattle Nutrient Requirements
Before formulating any TMR, you must know the nutrient requirements of the production group you are feeding. Requirements differ dramatically between a dry cow, a fresh high-producing dairy cow, a growing stocker, and a finishing beef animal.
The nutrient categories to assess and balance are:
| Nutrient Category | Key Metric | Why It Matters | Priority Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dry Matter Intake (DMI) | % of body weight | Sets the volume of feed the animal can consume; all other nutrients expressed relative to DMI | Critical |
| Energy (NEL / NEG / NEm) | Mcal/kg DM | Drives milk production, growth rate, and body condition score | Critical |
| Crude Protein (CP) | % of DM | Supports milk protein, muscle growth, and microbial protein synthesis in the rumen | Critical |
| Rumen Degradable Protein (RDP) | % of CP | Feeds rumen microbes; excess causes nitrogen excretion and reduced performance | High |
| Neutral Detergent Fiber (NDF) | % of DM | Maintains rumen mat, chewing activity, and rumen pH buffering | Critical |
| Non-Fiber Carbohydrates (NFC) | % of DM | Rapidly fermentable energy; must be balanced against NDF to prevent acidosis | High |
| Minerals (Ca, P, Mg, K, S) | g/day or % DM | Skeletal development, milk fever prevention, enzyme function | High |
| Trace Minerals (Zn, Cu, Se, I, Co) | mg/kg DM (ppm) | Immunity, reproductive performance, hoof health | Moderate |
| Vitamins (A, D, E) | IU/day | Immune function, bone health, antioxidant status | Moderate |
Reference Requirements by Cattle Class
| Cattle Category | DMI (% BW) | NEL (Mcal/kg DM) | CP (% DM) | NDF (% DM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| High-Producing Dairy Cow (35+ kg/day) | 3.5–4.0% | 1.65–1.75 | 17–18% | 28–32% |
| Mid-Lactation Dairy Cow | 3.0–3.5% | 1.55–1.65 | 15–16% | 30–34% |
| Dry Cow (Far-off) | 1.8–2.2% | 1.25–1.35 | 12–13% | 40–50% |
| Beef Growing/Stocker | 2.5–3.0% | 1.30–1.45 | 13–15% | 35–45% |
| Beef Finishing (Feedlot) | 2.8–3.2% | 1.50–1.60 | 12–13% | 18–25% |
| Cow-Calf (Lactating Beef Cow) | 2.5–3.0% | 1.35–1.45 | 10–12% | 38–50% |
Source: NRC (2001) Nutrient Requirements of Dairy Cattle; NRC (2016) Nutrient Requirements of Beef Cattle. Values are approximate; always consult a licensed nutritionist for herd-specific balancing.
4. Core TMR Ingredients & Their Roles
TMR ingredients fall into four broad categories. Understanding the role of each is essential for building an effective ration.
A. Forages (the Foundation)
Forages provide the physically effective fiber (peNDF) needed to stimulate cud-chewing and maintain rumen buffer. They are the bulk of most cow and growing-animal rations.
| Forage | Typical DM% | NDF % (DM) | CP % (DM) | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corn (Maize) Silage | 30–38% | 42–50% | 7–8% | Energy base; dairy & beef |
| Alfalfa (Lucerne) Silage | 35–45% | 38–44% | 18–22% | Protein supplement forage; dairy |
| Grass/Mixed Hay | 85–90% | 50–60% | 10–14% | Dry cow; beef growing |
| Wheat Straw | 85–90% | 72–80% | 3–4% | Filler fiber; dry cow TMR |
| Sorghum Silage | 28–35% | 52–62% | 8–10% | Alternative energy forage |
| Whole-Crop Wheat Silage | 30–40% | 48–55% | 9–12% | Mixed systems; dairy |
B. Concentrates & Energy Feeds
Concentrates supply the majority of energy and are adjusted based on production level. High-producing animals receive more; dry cows receive less or none.
| Ingredient | DM% | Energy (NEL Mcal/kg) | CP% | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ground Corn (Maize) | 88% | 1.75 | 8.5% | Primary starch source; limit to avoid acidosis |
| Barley (rolled) | 88% | 1.65 | 12% | More rumen-degradable than corn |
| Wheat (rolled) | 88% | 1.68 | 13% | High fermentability; use with care |
| Soybean Meal (SBM) | 89% | 1.62 | 44–48% | Key protein source; high bypass protein |
| Canola Meal | 90% | 1.48 | 36–38% | Excellent amino acid profile |
| Dried Distillers Grains (DDGS) | 90% | 1.56 | 26–28% | Protein + fat + bypass protein |
| Corn Gluten Feed | 88% | 1.45 | 21–24% | Cost-effective NDF + energy |
| Beet Pulp (dried) | 91% | 1.50 | 9–10% | Fermentable fiber; safe energy source |
| Palm Kernel Expeller | 91% | 1.38 | 16–18% | Alternative fiber + fat |
| Soybean Hulls | 90% | 1.40 | 11–12% | NDF source; low acidosis risk |
C. Mineral & Vitamin Premixes
These are added in small quantities but are nutritionally non-negotiable. Macro minerals (calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, sodium) are typically included at 1–2% of DM. Trace mineral and vitamin premixes are usually added at 0.1–0.25% of DM based on manufacturer specifications and blood/forage analysis.
D. Feed Additives
Sodium Bicarbonate (NaHCO₃): Rumen buffer; reduces risk of acidosis in high-grain TMRs. Typically 0.5–1.5% of DM.
Yeast Cultures / Live Yeasts: Stabilize rumen pH, improve fiber digestibility, boost DMI. Dose per product label.
Monensin (Rumensin): Ionophore that improves feed efficiency and reduces ketosis risk in dairy; requires veterinary prescription in many countries.
Bypass Fat (Calcium Soaps / Prilled Fat): Increases energy density without disrupting rumen fermentation. Use at 2–4% of DM maximum.
Silage Inoculants: Added at ensiling stage but relevant to TMR ingredient quality — protect silage from aerobic deterioration.
5. TMR Formulation Ratios by Production Stage
The forage-to-concentrate ratio (F:C ratio) is the cornerstone of TMR design. It changes significantly depending on whether you are feeding for milk production, growth, or maintenance. The following visual shows typical forage-to-concentrate splits by group.
6. Step-by-Step TMR Formulation Process
Formulating a TMR from scratch involves a systematic approach. Use ration-balancing software (e.g., NDS Professional, CNCPS, CPM-Dairy, or Brill) whenever possible, but understanding the manual process is essential.
Define the Target Group
Identify which production group you're formulating for (e.g., fresh cows, late-lactation, dry cows, finishing beef). Record average body weight, target production level, and BCS. Never formulate a single ration for groups with widely different requirements.
Collect & Analyze All Feed Ingredients
Submit silages, hays, and by-products for laboratory forage analysis (wet chemistry or NIRS). At minimum, get DM%, CP%, NDF%, ADF%, and NEL values. Never use book values for silages — moisture and quality vary widely by batch, field, and season.
Estimate Dry Matter Intake (DMI)
Use NRC prediction equations or empirical models. For dairy cows, DMI is primarily driven by body weight, milk production, and stage of lactation. For beef cattle, DMI is largely a function of body weight and target ADG. This figure sets the total "feed budget" for the ration.
Set Forage Inclusions First
Lock in forage amounts first, as they drive rumen health and fill the bulk of the ration. Ensure NDF from forage alone is ≥19–21% of total DM for lactating dairy cows. For beef finishing rations, forage may be as low as 15–20% of DM, but a minimum roughage level must always be maintained.
Balance Energy & Protein with Concentrates
Fill the remaining energy and protein gap using concentrates. Start with lower-cost energy sources (corn, barley) and adjust protein sources (SBM, canola meal, DDGS) until CP and metabolizable protein (MP) targets are met. Always check the RDP:RUP ratio.
Add Minerals, Vitamins & Additives
Use lab analysis and NRC recommendations to calculate deficiencies in Ca, P, Mg, K, Na, S, and trace minerals. Add a commercial premix that covers trace minerals and vitamins A, D, E. Include buffers and other additives as warranted by the production situation.
Check & Verify Ration Balance
Cross-check against all nutrient targets: energy, CP, RDP, RUP, NDF, NFC, calcium-to-phosphorus ratio (should be 1.5:1 to 2:1), and anion-cation balance (DCAD) for transition cows. Run a "sanity check" — does DMI predicted match animal capacity? Is DM% of the total TMR between 45–55%?
Calculate As-Fed Quantities per Head per Day
Convert all DM-basis figures to as-fed weights, factoring in the moisture content of each ingredient. Calculate per-head-per-day amounts, then scale up to the total number of animals and the load capacity of your mixer wagon.
Monitor, Evaluate & Refine
After 2–4 weeks, evaluate performance indicators: milk production, body condition score change, manure consistency, bunk refusal rates (target 3–5% refusals), and rumen fill scores. Adjust the ration if performance deviates from targets.
7. Correct Mixing Order & Equipment
The order in which ingredients are added to the mixer wagon is critical. Incorrect sequencing leads to poor mixing homogeneity, ingredient bridging, motor strain, and nutritional inconsistency between the beginning and end of the delivery.
Recommended Loading Order (Vertical Auger Mixer)
| Loading Sequence | Ingredient Type | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Long-stemmed hay / straw | Creates the "backbone" — prevents fine particles from caking at the auger base; promotes even mixing |
| 2nd | Dry concentrates (grains, meals) | Added after hay has started tumbling; distributes evenly through forage matrix |
| 3rd | Protein supplements & premixes | Small inclusions distribute more uniformly when surrounded by bulk material |
| 4th | Wet by-products (brewers grains, beet pulp, etc.) | Their moisture helps coat dry particles; aids homogeneity |
| 5th | Silage(s) | Major ingredient — added near end prevents the wet silage from clumping at the bottom before the mixer reaches full speed |
| Last | Liquid fat / molasses | Applied via spray on top of mixed load — distributes in final mixing turns; avoids premature clumping |
Penn State Particle Separator Targets
| Screen | Particle Size | Dairy Cow Target | Beef Finishing Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top screen (>19mm) | Long particles | 2–8% | <5% |
| Middle screen (8–19mm) | Medium particles | 30–50% | 20–30% |
| Bottom screen (1.18–8mm) | Short particles | 10–20% | 30–40% |
| Pan (<1.18mm) | Fine particles / dust | 20–30% | 30–40% |
8. TMR Cost Analysis & Feed Efficiency
Feed cost typically accounts for 50–70% of total variable costs in a cattle operation. Optimizing TMR formulation for both nutrition and economics is essential for profitability. The goal is to achieve the lowest cost per unit of production — per litre of milk, per kg of gain — not just the lowest cost per tonne of feed.
Feed Conversion Benchmarks
| Production System | Metric | Good FCR | Excellent FCR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dairy (Holstein) | kg DM / kg ECM | 0.85–0.90 | <0.80 |
| Beef Finishing | kg DM / kg live weight gain | 6.5–7.5 | <6.0 |
| Beef Growing (stocker) | kg DM / kg live weight gain | 7.0–8.5 | <7.0 |
• Source seasonal forages — purchase surplus hay and silage at harvest when prices are lowest; preserve quality with proper storage.
• Use local by-products — brewers grains, beet pulp, citrus pulp, and oilseed meals can replace expensive grains if correctly accounted for in the balance.
• Formulate on a least-cost basis — ration-balancing software allows you to find the cheapest ingredient combination that still meets all nutrient targets.
• Reduce refusals — targeting 3–5% bunk refusals maximizes DMI without over-supplying feed. Excessive refusals are a direct cost waste.
• Test forages frequently — using inaccurate forage values forces overuse of concentrates as a safety buffer.
9. Common TMR Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Consequence | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Not testing forage moisture | Inaccurate DM — ration is over or underfed on DM basis | Test silages at least monthly; hay at each new lot |
| Over-mixing | Reduced particle length → rumen acidosis risk increases | Use PSPS regularly; time mixing to 3–5 min post last ingredient |
| One ration for all groups | Over- or under-nutrition; health and reproductive issues | Formulate separate rations by production group minimum |
| Ignoring bunk management | Excessive refusals or empty bunks; inconsistent DMI | Monitor daily; target 3–5% refusals, push up feed 3–4× per day |
| Incorrect loading order | Uneven mixing; slug feeding of concentrates | Always follow the correct loading sequence for your mixer type |
| Not accounting for ingredient variability | Ration nutrient levels shift without detection | Use rolling averages from 3+ forage tests; build in safety margins |
| Overlooking heat stress effects | Reduced DMI in summer; energy deficit goes undetected | Increase energy density in hot weather; deliver TMR in cooler hours |
| Skipping transition cow nutrition | Milk fever, ketosis, displaced abomasum | Formulate specific close-up and fresh cow TMRs; monitor DCAD carefully |
Frequently Asked Questions
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