Better animal management decisions today mean greater profits tomorrow.
Profitable, efficient and sustainable animal management, all in one app. Identify under-performers and capitalize on over-performers, compare feed efficiencies, and oversee every detail that influences the quality of the animals you raise.

Track animal insights in real-time
Organise and compare historical data and current animal insights to make more profitable decisions, more confidently. Whether you want insight into high-performing sire genetics or where your best-performing cattle were purchased from, AgriWebb has answers.
Know your animals.
From genetic traits to vendors, double down on factors connected to your best-performing animals. Easily analyze growth and performance metrics for each individual animal.

Capitalise on profits
Identify under performers and make informed decisions on how to improve their performance to reach sale weight or which animals to cull.

Organise your performance
Organise and analyze your livestock by characteristics like vendors, sires, dams, breed, age class.


Go beyond the basics.
You shouldn’t have to guess at the investment you’re making into your operation. AgriWebb unlocks in-depth performance records and profitability insights that you won’t find anywhere else.
Reports at-a-glance
Explore all reportsPut record keeping on autopilot with hardware integrations
Save time and close data gaps by connecting your data from your EID and weighing hardware straight to your AgriWebb account. When your last animal walks away from a weighing session, you walk away with all the data you need to make more confident decisions down the road.

Stay organised with management groups and enterprises
Organise livestock into the business units that comprise your operation, and easily compare to see which ones are most profitable and which areas have room for improvement.

“We saw the benefits of implementing AgriWebb almost instantly. As soon as we started to use it, {we could see} even simple things like live weight gains and how the cattle were doing in the group and on an individual basis. We didn’t get down to that level of detail beforehand.”

Jonathan D
Herefordshire, UK