Agricultural drone mapping costs $2 to $8 per acre for raw orthomosaics and elevation data, rising to $5 to $15 per acre when prescription maps for variable-rate application are included. Only FAA Part 107 is required, with no Part 137 or state pesticide license needed. Fixed-wing drones cover 500 to 1,500 acres per flight, while quadcopter platforms handle 100 to 400 acres per flight.
Drone-based aerial mapping for field boundaries, elevation, drainage planning, yield zones and variable-rate prescription maps.
About this service
Agricultural drone mapping produces orthomosaics, digital elevation models and field boundary data for precision farming, drainage tile design, yield zone analysis and variable-rate prescriptions. Fixed-wing drones like the senseFly eBee X and quadcopter platforms like the DJI Mavic 3 Multispectral and Phantom 4 RTK cover 200 to 1,500 acres per flight at ground sample distances of 1 to 5 centimeters per pixel. Mapping is the lowest regulatory barrier ag drone service because it does not require Part 137 or a state pesticide license, only FAA Part 107 and the standard airspace authorizations. Typical deliverables include geo-referenced orthomosaics in GeoTIFF or JPEG, digital elevation models for drainage planning, volumetric calculations for silage piles and vegetation index maps (NDVI, NDRE) as a raw layer. Most operators charge per acre with a minimum flight fee, and prescription-ready outputs (variable-rate fertilizer or seed maps) command a premium over raw orthomosaic output.
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Middle Tennessee precision ag & orchard drone services
Black Dog Drone Co. provides agricultural drone spraying and mapping services to Middle Tennessee grain and specialty crop producers. The company handles corn and soybean fungicide applications, orchard and vineyard spray programs in the Highland Rim and NDVI mapping for precision agronomic recommendations.
Verified OperatorFAA Part 107 β
Drone SprayingAerial MappingCrop Scouting
Price on request
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Frequently asked questions
Design drainage tile layouts from the elevation model, generate variable-rate seed and fertilizer prescriptions from NDVI zones, document stand counts after emergence, calculate storage pile volumes, track crop progress over the season and produce yield zone maps for post-harvest analysis. Most deliverables import directly into Climate FieldView, John Deere Operations Center or SMS software.
No. Mapping does not dispense anything, so Part 107 is sufficient. This is why mapping is often the first commercial ag drone service new operators add, since the regulatory barrier is roughly a weekend of study and a proctored exam compared to the months-long Part 137 exemption process.
RTK-corrected drone elevation maps typically hit 2 to 5 centimeter vertical accuracy, which is sufficient for tile drainage design in most field conditions. Engineers still verify high-precision designs with ground GPS shots at tile outlet locations, but the drone flight replaces 80 to 90 percent of the traditional grid survey time and cost.
Raw orthomosaic mapping runs $2 to $5 per acre with a $250 to $500 minimum flight fee. Adding elevation data typically adds $1 to $3 per acre. Full prescription-ready outputs (variable-rate maps in the customer agronomy software of choice) run $5 to $15 per acre. Multi-season contracts often discount these rates 20 to 30 percent.
Technically yes but practically no. T50s are designed for spraying payload and battery use, not long endurance mapping. Most operators who offer both services run a T50 for spraying plus a Mavic 3 Multispectral or Phantom 4 RTK for mapping because the mapping drones deliver better ground sample distance, longer flight times and better imaging sensors.