EAS Drones
Ag drone services with Part 107 and Part 137 certifications. Carries full liability coverage. Serves Utah and Idaho.
EAS Drones is a Utah and Idaho drone applicator covering drone pesticide and fungicide spraying, aerial cover crop seeding and dry granular spreading on Row Crops in the Great Plains region. Headquartered in Utah (serves UT, the operation reaches farms across the Great Plains region. Utah requires both a federal Part 137 ag aircraft operator certificate and an Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (UDAF)-issued aerial-category pesticide applicator license for any commercial spray.
Operations are based in the Great Plains region.
Services offered
Pricing context for the crops EAS Drones services
Typical 2026 per-acre rates for drone spraying by crop, based on US ag drone industry data. Contact the operator for a quote on your specific fields.
- Drone spraying for row crops$12 to $22 per acre
Crops serviced
Certifications & compliance
States served (2)
Aerial pesticide licensing in states served
Every state requires a pesticide applicator license with the aerial category endorsement on top of FAA Part 137. The agencies that issue these licenses in EAS Drones's service area:
- Utah — requires Category 11: Aerial Application. "Special qualifications" for aerial beyond standard exam. for aerial pesticide application; the licensing authority is Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (UDAF).
- Idaho — requires Category AA: Aerial Applicators for aerial pesticide application; the licensing authority is Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA).
Full agency, exam and renewal-cycle details by state are catalogued on the state pesticide licensing reference.
Verify and resources
Primary-source references for verifying credentials and looking up state-specific rules in EAS Drones's service area.
Frequently asked questions
Verifying EAS Drones runs through three independent checks: Part 107 via the FAA Airmen Inquiry, Part 137 via the issuing FAA Flight Standards office, and the state aerial-category pesticide applicator license via the receiving state's department of agriculture. In Utah the state credential is issued by Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (UDAF); you can ask the operator for the applicator license number and verify it with the agency directly. Pair that with a current chemical-drift COI and the Section 44807 exemption number for due diligence.
Typical drone spraying rates of $12 to $22 per acre in the region is application-only — the chemical itself, surfactants and adjuvants are usually farmer-supplied. The rate covers calibration, RTK GPS flight planning, the labor to fly the field, mixing and loading from the supplied product, and the FIFRA Part 170 application record (date, time, product, EPA reg number, rate, weather, field ID). Watch for travel surcharges past a stated radius, weekend or emergency-turnaround premiums, terrain or obstruction add-ons, and any minimum-acreage floor on small fields. Confirm in writing.
Request a quote from EAS Drones
Tell EAS Drones about your fields. They reply within 24 hours, often faster during spray season. Free, no obligation, and you can also ask for 2 more quotes from verified operators in Utah to compare.
- Goes directly to EAS Drones, not a call center.
- 3 quotes max if you broaden, never more. We never sell your info.