Skip to content
US Ag Drone Directory

Corn Drone Spraying in Arizona

Agricultural drone services for corn in Arizona. Typical rate: $12 to $18/acre

In Arizona, drone spraying for corn sits within the broader state custom-rate band of $16 to $28/acre, with the most comparable per-acre range for corn applications running $12 to $18/acre. Arizona sits in the Great Plains region, which shapes the disease, drift and timing pressures local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Arizona require Drone Pilot License (DPL), separate from Agricultural Aircraft Pilot License (AAP) from Arizona Department of Agriculture (AZDA) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.

🌽

About corn drone spraying

Corn is the largest crop in the United States at over 90 million acres, and drone fungicide application at the VT/R1 tassel stage is the number one use case for agricultural drones in America. Once corn exceeds six to eight feet, ground sprayers cannot clear the canopy without wheel-track damage that costs 3 to 6 bushels per acre in crushed rows. Drones solve this cleanly because they fly 8 to 15 feet above the canopy and never touch the ground. University trials are decisive on efficacy. Beck's Practical Farm Research across Iowa, Indiana and Illinois showed drone-applied fungicide at 2 to 3 gallons per acre matched ground rig results at 15 to 20 gallons per acre, with an average yield response of 5 to 8 bushels over untreated corn. Iowa State and Purdue Extension confirm the finding for tar spot, gray leaf spot and southern rust pressure years. Drone operators in the Corn Belt treat 300 to 600 acres per drone per day on DJI Agras T50 or Hylio AG-272 class machines during the peak two-week VT/R1 window in late July, and most book up four to six weeks ahead. Tank mixes combining a strobilurin fungicide with an insecticide for western corn rootworm beetle or western bean cutworm are standard on high-value seed corn and stacked-trait fields.

Typical rate: $12 to $18/acre
US acreage: 90M+ acres

Application calendar for corn

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec

Green months = optimal application window

Aerial pesticide licensing in Arizona

Arizona requires Drone Pilot License (DPL), separate from Agricultural Aircraft Pilot License (AAP) for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is Arizona Department of Agriculture (AZDA).

Full agency, exam and renewal-cycle details: Arizona state page · 50-state licensing reference · state extension service.

Corn drone operators in Arizona

Daytona Beach, FL

FL · first FAA-certified UAS spray company, 10,000+ flights completed

Daytona Beach, FL manufacturer and operator formerly known as LEAT (Leading Edge Aerial Technologies). First company to receive FAA certification for UAS spray applications of agricultural products. Founded 2012; acquired by Central Garden and Pet in November 2024. Completed over 10,000 UAS flights. Makes PrecisionVision PV35X, PV40X and PV100 platforms plus MapVision software.

Verified OperatorFAA Part 137 ✓FAA Part 107 ✓
Drone SprayingEquipment SalesAerial Mapping
Price on request

FAQ: corn drone spraying in Arizona

Drone spraying rates for corn in Arizona typically run $12 to $18/acre for application only; the farmer supplies the chemical product. State-level custom-rate guidance for Arizona averages $16 to $28/acre. Pricing varies based on total acreage, distance from the operator base and product type.