Southern Idaho's premier ag drone spraying service. Owner is military veteran who grew up farming south of Burley. In second year of operation. USDOT 4398523.
Row Crops Drone Spraying in Idaho
Agricultural drone services for row crops in Idaho. Typical rate: $12 to $22/acre
In Idaho, drone spraying for row crops sits within the broader state custom-rate band of $14 to $22/acre, with the most comparable per-acre range for row crops applications running $12 to $22/acre. Idaho sits in the Great Plains region, which shapes the disease, drift and timing pressures local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Idaho require Category AA: Aerial Applicators from Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.
About row crops drone spraying
Row crops in US agriculture covers corn (over 90 million acres), soybeans (87 million), wheat (45 million), cotton (10 million), sorghum (6 to 8 million), and rice (2.5 million), plus smaller-acreage entries like dry beans, peanuts and sunflowers. Together these account for roughly 240 million planted acres each year per USDA NASS, and they are the single largest customer for commercial agricultural drone spraying in the United States. Row-crop spraying is dominated by foliar fungicide and insecticide programs in the canopy-tall middle of the season, plus burndown and pre-emerge herbicide work at the edges. Drone economics work because row-crop fields are large and flat enough to support 200 to 600 acres-per-day throughput on a single DJI Agras T50 or Hylio AG-272 class machine, and tall canopies (corn at VT/R1, soybeans at R2/R3) make ground equipment costly or impossible. Operators serving row crops should hold FAA Part 107 plus FAA Part 137, the state commercial pesticide applicator license with aerial endorsement, and a chemical drift insurance rider. The four major drone-treated row crops have their own profile pages โ corn, soybeans, wheat and cotton โ with crop-specific timing, pests and rate ranges. Operators listing "row-crops" generally service multiple of these crops within a region.
Application calendar for row crops
Green months = optimal application window
Aerial pesticide licensing in Idaho
Idaho requires Category AA: Aerial Applicators for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA).
Full agency, exam and renewal-cycle details: Idaho state page ยท 50-state licensing reference ยท state extension service.
Row Crops drone operators in Idaho
All team members are FAA licensed pilots and licensed applicators in Idaho. Also works with government conservation and wildlife agencies.
Founded by Alex McRae, who grew up on a farm in Caldwell. Also operates Nature Shield pest control. BYU-Idaho graduate.
Founded by Brenden Hubele (23), Weiser HS grad, Idaho National Guard member, licensed flight instructor. Funded by SBA 7(a) loan through Zions Bank. Sprayed 1,200 acres of Crowsfoot in New Meadows.
Founded by Idaho farmers in the Magic Valley. Deploys two drones simultaneously for increased productivity.
Lifelong farming and ranching background. Serves New Plymouth and surrounding communities with precision drone spraying using DJI Agras T50.
Unique service: deploying beneficial insects via drone as biological pest control. Works with Ag Idaho Consulting.
Ag drone services with Part 107 and Part 137 certifications. Carries full liability coverage. Serves Utah and Idaho.
FAQ: row crops drone spraying in Idaho
Drone spraying rates for row crops in Idaho typically run $12 to $22/acre for application only; the farmer supplies the chemical product. State-level custom-rate guidance for Idaho averages $14 to $22/acre. Pricing varies based on total acreage, distance from the operator base and product type.
Optimal drone application timing for row crops runs May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct. Exact timing depends on weather, growth stage and pest or disease pressure each season; contact a local operator in Idaho for scheduling at least 4 to 6 weeks ahead of the peak window.
Commercial drone pesticide application in Idaho 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 Category AA: Aerial Applicators from Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA). Confirm any operator you hire holds all three before any application.
Drone spraying on row crops 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.
In US ag, "row crops" means field crops planted in distinct rows on large acreage โ corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, sorghum, rice, dry beans and peanuts are the main entries. Specialty crops, vegetables, orchards, vineyards and pasture are usually grouped separately because their drone application patterns and rates differ.
Corn. Corn fungicide at the VT/R1 tassel stage is the single largest use case for agricultural drones in America, covering over 90 million acres annually. Soybean fungicide at R2/R3 is a close second.
National averages run $12 to $18 per acre for fungicide and insecticide on corn, soybeans and wheat. Cotton defoliant runs $14 to $20 per acre. The 2026 Iowa State Custom Rate Survey is the cleanest university-validated benchmark, with an average of $12.50 per acre across 47 Iowa operator responses.
Mid-July through early August for corn fungicide (VT/R1), mid-July through mid-August for soybeans (R2/R3), late May through early June for wheat heading, and September through October for cotton defoliation. The windows overlap heavily; book operators 4 to 6 weeks ahead.
No. Per-acre rates vary by crop based on field size, target pest pressure and product complexity. Corn and soybeans are the cheapest because fields are large and operators run high volume. Cotton defoliant runs higher because the application window is short and the work is concentrated. Specialty row crops like rice and peanuts see narrower per-acre ranges.