Rapid-response drone spraying for sudden pest outbreaks, disease epidemics, hurricane recovery and other time-sensitive agricultural emergencies.
Emergency Spray Services drone services in Maine are not yet listed by an operator in this directory; the page below covers what to look for and how the service works in Maine. Maine's state-level custom-rate guidance averages $20 to $32/acre, with the broader emergency spray services band running $18 to $35/acre. In Maine, emergency spray services most commonly serves wheat, cover crops and orchards. Maine sits in the Southeast region, which shapes the calendar, weather and competitive pressure local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Maine require Category 11: Aerial Pest Control from Maine Board of Pesticides Control (BPC) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.
Emergency Spray Services — quick facts
Emergency ag drone spraying runs $18 to $35 per acre, which is 20 to 50 percent above standard rates due to short-notice logistics and ferry-time costs. Common triggers include fall armyworm invasions, late-season aphid blooms, rapid tar spot pressure and post-hurricane defoliation cleanup. During regional outbreaks, local operators book to capacity within 24 to 48 hours and emergency customers often rely on operators driving 100 to 300 miles.
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How emergency spray services works
Emergency ag drone spray services handle time-sensitive pest outbreaks (fall armyworm invasions, late-season aphid blooms, rapid tar spot development), disease epidemics (sudden Fusarium head blight pressure, rapid-spread late blight) and disaster recovery (post-hurricane defoliation cleanup, flood-damaged crop replant window). Premium pricing applies: emergency rates typically run 20 to 50 percent above standard spraying rates due to short-notice logistics, weekend and night-window operations and the ferry-time cost of relocating a drone fleet on short notice. Operator capacity is the main constraint: during a regional outbreak, local drone operators book to capacity within 24 to 48 hours and emergency customers end up relying on operators driving from 100 to 300 miles away. State departments of agriculture maintain pest emergency contact lists in many states, and the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) sometimes coordinates rapid response spraying for declared quarantine pests. Emergency spraying requires the same Part 137 certification and state applicator license as standard work, with no regulatory shortcuts regardless of the urgency.
Typical rate: $18 to $35/acre
Emergency Spray Services on top Maine crops
In Maine, emergency spray services is most commonly used on:
National · DJI Agras distributor explicitly serving NE states
Division of Rozell Sprayer Manufacturing with 40+ years in the sprayer industry based in Tyler, TX. Distributes the full DJI Agras line explicitly to multiple Northeast states including NJ, NY, DE, RI, ME, VT, MA and MD. Provides sales, technical support and training.
National · farmer-founded ag drone dealer since 2015
One of the earliest US agricultural drone dealers, founded 2015 by a group of farmers. Sells DJI Agras T50, T100 and Talos T60X plus sprayer trailer solutions. Provides training at IN/IL facilities. CropTech Solutions (Waterford, PA) is an authorized FlyingAg dealer. Contact: corey@flyingag.com.
National network · largest spray drone operator network in US, 30+ states
Largest spray drone operator network in the US covering 30+ states, based in Iowa City, IA and led by CEO Mariah Scott. AcreConnect platform (map.acreconnect.io) connects farmers with local operators. Stone Valley Drones (PA) is a network member. Sells DJI Agras T10, T30, T40 and XAG P100 Pro. Holds FAA Exemption 18929B.
Northeast · only identified XAG authorized dealer in the region
The only identified XAG authorized dealer serving the Northeast US. Also sells DJI drones and the Ceres Air platform. Offers precision aerial application, multispectral mapping, agricultural education, training, repairs and drone sales. Partners with Virginia Ag Drones. Offers John Deere Financing.
Verified OperatorXAG Certified
Equipment SalesPilot TrainingDrone Spraying+1 more
National · largest US ag spray drone distributor, 21K YouTube subscribers
Self-described largest agricultural spray drone distributor in the US, founded 2019 in Boonville, MO by Taylor Moreland and Kit Carlson. Distributes EAVision J70, J150 and RoadRunner 350. Maintains dealer locator and custom applicator maps. Hi-Aloft (PA) is an affiliate dealer. 21K YouTube subscribers.
Vermont's first agricultural drone service · licensed pesticide applicator
Self-described Vermont's first agricultural drone service, founded 2025. Operated by FAA-certified pilots and a Vermont-licensed commercial pesticide applicator. Services include precision aerial spraying, seeding, crop monitoring, thermal imaging, aerial photography and drone sales.
Verified OperatorFAA Part 137 ✓FAA Part 107 ✓
Drone SprayingCover Crop SeedingCrop Scouting+2 more
First DJI Agriculture distributor in the Northeast · Syracuse, NY
First DJI Agriculture Distributor in the Northeast, originally founded as Empire Drone in Fulton, NY (2018) by Sean Falconer and John McGraw. Acquired by Volatus Aerospace in November 2022 for approx. $650K. Sells, trains, maintains and leases DJI Agras T16, T40, T50 plus Autel, Draganfly and Wingtra platforms. Showcased at 2025 NY Farm Show.
Specialty drone seeding operator focused on cover crop establishment into standing cash crops across New England. Has worked at Borderview Farm Research Institute in Alburgh, VT and in Hadley, MA. Operates heavy-lift agricultural drones. Contact: (978) 430-0415.
First NE ag drone service · spraying + spreading + monitoring
Self-described first agricultural drone service provider in the Northeast. Father-son team (Tom and Tim Massey) offering spraying up to 50 acres/hour plus fertilizer spreading, cover crop seeding, browntail moth management, multispectral crop monitoring and LiDAR mapping. Operates DJI Agras T40 fleet from Rockland, ME.
Verified OperatorFAA Part 107 ✓
Drone SprayingFertilizer ApplicationCover Crop Seeding+2 more
Maine · browntail moth pesticide spray & nest removal
Maine drone service providing browntail moth pesticide application and nest removal using a DeLeaves cutting attachment. Also equipped for aerial photography and facility inspections. Based in Dedham, ME and serving the state.
FAA Part 107 ✓
Drone Spraying
Price on request
Primary sources for emergency spray services
Federal regulators and industry references that govern emergency spray services in Maine and across the United States.
Maine does not yet have an operator in our directory listing emergency spray services as a service. Many regional and national operators cover multiple states, so contact operators in neighbouring states or list your business free if you provide emergency spray services in Maine.
Commercial emergency spray services in Maine 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 11: Aerial Pest Control from Maine Board of Pesticides Control (BPC). Confirm any operator you hire holds all three before any application.
Most Maine operators book 4 to 6 weeks ahead of peak windows; rate confirmation is contract-bound and operator-specific. In Maine, emergency spray services is most often booked for wheat, cover crops and orchards, each with its own seasonal window. For one-off jobs during peak demand spikes, supply tightens fast — establishing the operator relationship in the off-season pays off.
If the operator is local and has open capacity, same day or next day. During regional outbreaks when local capacity is full, expect 3 to 7 day delays as operators from farther away reposition fleets. The fastest emergency responses are usually from operators who already have a prior contract or relationship with the customer.
Three reasons. Short-notice field remapping and mission planning add 2 to 4 hours of admin per job. Emergency ferry moves (driving drones 100 to 300 miles) cost operator fuel, lodging and opportunity cost from canceled local jobs. Emergency windows often require weekend, night or pre-dawn work that pays pilot premiums above standard day-rates.
Fall armyworm outbreaks in the Southeast and Mid-South, sudden soybean aphid pressure in Minnesota and the Dakotas, late-season tar spot runs in Indiana and Wisconsin, rapid-spread Fusarium head blight during wet wheat heading years and post-hurricane cotton and soybean defoliation cleanup in the Delta and Southeast.
For declared quarantine pests (boll weevil resurgence, fruit fly outbreaks, emerald ash borer spread into agricultural margins), APHIS sometimes coordinates and partially funds emergency spray response. For routine pest and disease pressure, even heavy pressure, the farmer bears the cost. State-level pest emergency programs occasionally provide cost-share for declared outbreaks in specialty crops.
Yes, and this is the single most effective way to ensure rapid response. Many operators maintain priority customer lists that include growers who pre-pay a seasonal retainer (typically $500 to $2,500) or sign standby agreements. Standby contracts guarantee a response window (often 48 hours) at predetermined rates, which is particularly valuable for vineyard and orchard growers during high-pressure disease years.