US orchards cover more than 5 million acres, with Washington State apple and cherry blocks, California almond and pistachio plantations, Michigan and New York tree fruit and Florida citrus as the primary markets. Drone spraying has moved from experimental to mainstream in orchards over the past three years, driven by two factors: dense high-density plantings where conventional airblast sprayers struggle to cover the canopy, and hillside blocks in Washington and Oregon that are genuinely unsafe for tractor operation. Washington State University surveys report 95 percent of apple growers are interested in drone spraying, and Michigan State University Extension has published parallel interest data for tart cherry. Typical orchard spray programs include 6 to 12 passes per season for fire blight, powdery mildew, codling moth and brown rot. Per-acre rates are the highest of any US drone spray market ($20 to $35 per acre) because of the dense canopy, higher carrier volumes required (8 to 15 gpa) and the complex navigation around variable tree sizes and row widths. Cornell University Cooperative Extension reports drone pesticide reductions of 25 to 40 percent on high-density apple compared to airblast at equivalent disease and pest control. Almond and pistachio growers in California's Central Valley also increasingly use drones for early-season dormant oil and fungicide passes where air movement and orchard floor conditions limit ground equipment effectiveness.
Typical rate: $20 to $35/acre
US acreage: 5M+ acres