Agricultural drone services for potatoes in California. Typical rate: $16 to $24/acre
In California, drone spraying for potatoes sits within the broader state custom-rate band of $15 to $35/acre, with the most comparable per-acre range for potatoes applications running $16 to $24/acre. California sits in the California region, which shapes the disease, drift and timing pressures local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in California require CDPR Unmanned Pest Control Aircraft Pilot Certificate from CDPR (CalEPA) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.
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About potatoes drone spraying
US potato production runs roughly 1 million harvested acres per year per USDA NASS, with Idaho the dominant state at over 300,000 acres followed by Washington, Wisconsin, North Dakota, Colorado and Maine. Potatoes are one of the most pesticide-intensive row crops in US agriculture, with an 8-to-12-pass fungicide program per season targeting late blight (Phytophthora infestans), early blight (Alternaria solani) and white mold. Drones serve potato growers in two niches: late-season fungicide work after the canopy closes and ground rigs cause yield-damaging row crush, and Colorado potato beetle insecticide work on small or irregularly shaped fields where airplane setup time is uneconomic. Per-acre rates run $16 to $24, higher than corn or soybean fungicide because of the application frequency and the precision required to keep pesticide off neighboring sensitive crops. Idaho potato operators book through season contracts that cover the full disease program; spot work for beetle outbreaks runs at premium rates with 24-to-48-hour turnaround. Operators serving potato growers should hold FAA Part 137 plus the state commercial pesticide applicator license with aerial endorsement and, on Idaho fields, a Confidentiality Agreement with the grower for scheduling against neighboring fields. University of Idaho Extension and the Pacific Northwest Pest Management Handbook are the authoritative scouting references.
Typical rate: $16 to $24/acre
US acreage: 1M+ acres
Application calendar for potatoes
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Green months = optimal application window
Aerial pesticide licensing in California
California requires CDPR Unmanned Pest Control Aircraft Pilot Certificate for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is CDPR (CalEPA).
SkyFarm Solutions is California's premier agricultural drone service provider, specializing in vineyard fungicide applications, orchard treatments and specialty crop mapping. We serve Napa, Sonoma, San Joaquin Valley and Central Valley growers with precision drone applications where tractors struggle on hillside terrain. 4 drones, year-round operations.
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World's first commercial drone pollination service, founded 2017 in Syracuse, NY by Adam Fine and Matt Koball. Custom hexacopter fleet of 6 drones covers 40 acres/hour. Third-party studies show 25 to 50% yield increase. Won $500K Grow-NY prize and $250K GENIUS NY investment. First commercial apple pollination at Beak and Skiff orchard.
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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.
Salinas-based drone biocontrol company; patent-pending insect release technology; UC extension-backed research on drone-released lacewings for aphid control
DJI Agras drone distributor for the western US with 5 Oregon dealer locations (Harrisburg, Hillsboro, Madras, Rickreall, Woodburn) plus dealers across 7 western states
Pioneered first commercial sterile insect release via drone in US; treats 4,000+ acres of WA tree fruit; 40% higher recapture rate vs ground; partners with Colville Confederated Tribes
First FAA approval for drone swarm spraying operations; acquired Cal Forest Nurseries (CA) and Silvaseed (WA); largest private seed supplier west of Colorado; vertically integrated reforestation
Largest US spray drone operator network (formerly Rantizo). AcreConnect software integrates with John Deere. Spray ops acquired by investment group, software rebranded.
Farmer-founded drone dealer launched by successful US growers. Martin Hein manages 6000+ acres in Visalia and actively uses drones on almonds and citrus.
Drone SprayingEquipment RentalEquipment Sales+1 more
One of the first registered agricultural drone spray pilots in Monterey County. Former PCA who obtained full drone certification stack including CDPR Journeyman.
US-designed and manufactured ag spray drones. First company to receive FAA certification for UAS pesticide applications. Three pilots operating in California.
US's only vertically integrated reforestation company. Acquired Cal Forest Nurseries (California's largest tree nursery) in 2023. First FAA-certified for multi-drone BVLOS swarms.
County vector control district using drones for larvicide application. Obtained FAA Certificate of Authorization for heavy drone operations in marshlands.
Agricultural drone spray company hiring FPV Drone Operators in Paso Robles for precision pesticide and fertilizer applications. Limited public info available.
DJI authorized agriculture dealer in Riverside. Manufactures Talos T60X sprayer drone. BBB A+ rated. Hosts DJI Academy UASTC training center with flight simulators.
Veteran-owned agtech company; first authorized for commercial drone ops in CA agriculture. 2023 CDPR IPM Achievement Award. Partners with Koppert Biological Systems.
Major ag products distributor (4000+ employees) that was exclusive partner for Guardian SC1. Deployed 4 drones in Salinas since Dec 2023. Status uncertain post-Guardian Aug 2025 shutdown.
Japanese manufacturer with 30+ years ag drone experience. First UAS to receive FAA Part 137 certification in 2015. Pioneered commercial vineyard drone spraying in Napa.
FAA Part 137 ✓
Drone Spraying
Price on request
FAQ: potatoes drone spraying in California
Drone spraying rates for potatoes in California typically run $16 to $24/acre for application only; the farmer supplies the chemical product. State-level custom-rate guidance for California averages $15 to $35/acre. Pricing varies based on total acreage, distance from the operator base and product type.
Optimal drone application timing for potatoes runs May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep. Exact timing depends on weather, growth stage and pest or disease pressure each season; contact a local operator in California for scheduling at least 4 to 6 weeks ahead of the peak window.
Commercial drone pesticide application in California requires three credentials: an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate for the pilot, an FAA Part 137 Agricultural Aircraft Operator Certificate for the business, and CDPR Unmanned Pest Control Aircraft Pilot Certificate from CDPR (CalEPA). Confirm any operator you hire holds all three before any application.
Drone spraying on potatoes offers zero soil compaction, the ability to operate when fields are too wet for tractors, GPS-guided uniform coverage at 95%+ accuracy and the ability to treat small or irregularly shaped fields. Peer-reviewed studies (Nature Scientific Reports 2025, ScienceDirect 2025, ACS 2023) report 46 to 75% pesticide use reduction, 65 to 70% drift reduction at field boundaries and 90 to 99% lower operator chemical exposure versus ground equipment.
Potato drone spraying runs $16 to $24 per acre, the highest average among major US row crops because of the 8-to-12-pass disease program per season and the precision required to manage drift onto sensitive neighboring crops. Season contracts covering the full program are typically discounted 10 to 15% from spot rates.
Most Idaho and Washington programs run 8 to 12 passes per season, starting at row closure and continuing through vine-kill. Late blight pressure years can push the count to 14 or more passes on susceptible varieties. Pacific Northwest Pest Management Handbooks publish current threshold and rotation guidance.
Drift control on neighboring sensitive crops, smaller-field economics, and faster turnaround on Colorado potato beetle outbreaks. Airplanes are still the workhorse on contiguous 500+ acre Idaho fields, but drones win on fragmented production, drift-sensitive borders, and the late-season canopy work after row closure when airplane wingtip drift becomes a liability.
June through September is the heart of the disease program in the Pacific Northwest. Wisconsin and Maine peak slightly earlier in June through August. Vine-kill applications in September close the season. Operators serving Idaho potato country are typically fully booked into season contracts by mid-May.
Same FAA Part 107 plus Part 137 plus state commercial pesticide applicator license with aerial endorsement that any commercial drone spraying requires. Idaho and Washington both publish potato-specific drift management guidance under their state department of agriculture; some Idaho operators voluntarily certify under the Idaho Potato Commission grower-operator coordination program.