Southern Ag Drone Solutions
Launched 2023. DJI Agras T30. Fungicides insecticides herbicides foliar feed. Fertilizer spreading.
Southern Ag Drone Solutions provides drone pesticide and fungicide spraying and dry granular spreading for row crops grown in the region across Tennessee. The team operates out of Halls and serves farms throughout the Corn Belt region. Any operator running commercial pesticide passes over Tennessee fields holds FAA Part 137 alongside the Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA) aerial-applicator credential.
Operations are based in the Corn Belt region.
Services offered
States served (1)
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 Southern Ag Drone Solutions's service area:
- Tennessee — aerial pesticide work runs through Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA) under AER (Aerial) licensing exam + category certification.
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 Southern Ag Drone Solutions's service area.
Frequently asked questions
Southern Ag Drone Solutions should carry three credentials before any commercial pesticide application by drone in Tennessee: an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate for the pilot in command, an FAA Part 137 Agricultural Aircraft Operator Certificate for the business, and a state aerial-category pesticide applicator license. In Tennessee the state credential is issued by Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA); you can ask the operator for the applicator license number and verify it with the agency directly. A current certificate of insurance with chemical drift coverage and the operator's Section 44807 exemption number are reasonable to request alongside the license itself.
Typical drone spraying rates of $12 to $22 per acre in the region usually breaks down into three lines: (1) included — calibration, GPS-guided flight planning, machine and pilot labor to fly the field, mixing and loading farmer-supplied product, and a Part 170-compliant application record; (2) excluded — the pesticide and any adjuvants, which the farmer supplies; (3) surcharges — long travel, after-hours, difficult terrain or obstruction-heavy fields, and minimum-acreage charges below a stated threshold. Spell out which of those land on your invoice before the operator schedules.
Request a quote from Southern Ag Drone Solutions
Tell Southern Ag Drone Solutions 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 Tennessee to compare.
- Goes directly to Southern Ag Drone Solutions, not a call center.
- 3 quotes max if you broaden, never more. We never sell your info.