Monday, November 24, 2025

New report reveals Queensland horticulture pumps $6.06 billion into the economy and supports nearly 45,000 jobs: QFVG

Australian Rural & Regional News reminds readers that a media release is a statement of the author given. Media releases vary widely in reliability and may contain a combination of fact, aspirational statements, opinion, political commentary and even error. Especially on contentious issues, we suggest our readers read widely and assess the statements made by different parties and form their own view.

Recent stories

This story is open for comment below.  Be involved, share your views. 

Queensland Fruit & Vegetable Growers (QFVG), Media Release, 24 November 2025

Queensland’s horticulture sector is doing far more than feeding the nation – it’s contributing more than $6 billion to the state economy each year and supporting almost 45,000 jobs, according to a new report released today by the Queensland Fruit & Vegetable Growers (QFVG).

The Economic Contribution of the Queensland Horticulture Industry 2024–25 report provides the most up-to-date and comprehensive analysis of the industry’s true economic value. It shows the sector continues to grow, with an estimated $4.61 billion farm-gate value in 2024-25 – up from $4.08 billion in 2020–21.

QFVG Interim CEO Joe Moro said the report highlights not only the scale of horticulture’s economic contribution, but also its importance to the stability and resilience of regional communities.

“This report makes it clear that Queensland horticulture doesn’t just support regional economies – it drives them,” Mr Moro said. “When growers thrive, towns thrive. The wealth generated in the paddock flows straight into local businesses, services, jobs, and community life.”

Queensland grows one-quarter of Australia’s fresh produce and dominates national production in key crops such as bananas, pineapples, ginger, avocados, and strawberries. The state’s climatic diversity allows year-round production, underpinning both national food security and reliable supply for consumers. The report highlights Queensland’s unique efficiency: horticulture uses just 10 per cent of the state’s irrigation water and only 3 per cent of its land yet produces 40 per cent of Queensland’s irrigated agricultural value.

“Horticultural growers are some of the most efficient producers in Australian agriculture,” Mr Moro said. “They’re innovative, they invest heavily in technology, and they find ways to keep producing high-quality food despite rising costs, labour shortages, and policy pressures.”

Nearly 88 per cent of Queensland’s horticultural activity occurs in the regions, with the largest economic contributions coming from the Wide Bay, Cairns/Mareeba, and Toowoomba–Darling Downs. The sector directly employs 20,768 people, supports a further 24,078 through supply chains, and adds 16,860 seasonal jobs during harvest peaks.

“One in every 100 Queensland jobs depend on horticulture,” Mr Moro said. “This is a workforce-intensive industry that supports families, sustains small towns, and attracts new investment into the regions.”

Mr Moro said the report gives growers – and the broader industry – a stronger platform for advocacy at a time when farm viability is under increasing pressure.

“Growers deserve decisions based on facts, not assumptions,” he said. “This evidence base strengthens our ability to push for policies that protect farm viability, improve workforce access, strengthen supply chains, and ensure horticulture remains competitive globally.”

QFVG will use the findings to guide its advocacy agenda and ensure government and industry partners recognise the essential contribution growers make to Queensland’s economy, workforce, and food security.

Read the full report: www.qfvg.com.au/economic-contribution-horticulture-report.

Key Queensland horticulture facts

  • $4.61B estimated farm-gate value in 2024–25
  • $6.06B total value-added contribution to Queensland’s economy
  • 44,846 total jobs across the supply chain
  • 87.7 per cent of activity in regional Queensland
  • 25 per cent of Australia’s fresh produce grown in Queensland
  • 3,847 growers producing more than 120 commodities
, , , , , ,

KEEP IN TOUCH

Sign up for updates from Australian Rural & Regional News

Manage your subscription

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Subscribe for notice of every post

If you are really keen and would like an email about every post from ARR.News as soon as it is published, sign up here:

Email me posts ?

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new posts by email.

Share your views

Australian Rural & Regional News is opening media releases for comment to encourage healthy discussion and debate on issues relevant to our readers and to rural and regional Australia. Defamatory, unlawful, offensive or inappropriate comments will not be allowed.

Leave a Reply