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US Ag Drone Directory

Crop Health Monitoring in Montana

In-season drone crop scouting with NDVI, NDRE and multispectral imagery to detect stress, disease and pest pressure before visual symptoms appear.

Crop Health Monitoring drone services in Montana are listed by 2 operators in this directory. Montana's state-level custom-rate guidance averages $12 to $18/acre, with the broader crop health monitoring band running $3 to $10/acre per acre per flight. In Montana, crop health monitoring most commonly serves wheat, cover crops and corn. Montana sits in the Great Plains region, which shapes the calendar, weather and competitive pressure local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Montana require Category 18: Aerial Applicator from Montana Department of Agriculture (MDA) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.

Crop Health Monitoring โ€” quick facts

Drone crop health monitoring costs $3 to $10 per acre per flight, or $25 to $60 per acre per season for weekly monitoring programs. Multispectral sensors detect nitrogen stress, disease and pest damage 7 to 14 days before visual symptoms appear. Only FAA Part 107 is required, and the service is commonly bundled with variable-rate prescription mapping for input savings of $8 to $15 per acre on nitrogen and fungicide.

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How crop health monitoring works

Drone crop health monitoring uses multispectral and thermal sensors to detect plant stress 7 to 14 days before visual symptoms appear to a scout on the ground. Operators fly the DJI Mavic 3 Multispectral, Phantom 4 Multispectral or Parrot Bluegrass Fields platforms over corn, soybeans, wheat, vegetable and specialty crop fields on a weekly or biweekly schedule. Deliverables include NDVI and NDRE vegetation index maps, thermal imagery for irrigation stress detection and zone-based reports that translate spectral data into specific scouting recommendations. Typical use cases include tracking corn rootworm damage, nitrogen deficiency zones, variable emergence rates, irrigation uniformity and disease hotspot early warning. The service is typically billed per flight or per season, with per-acre rates $3 to $10 for single flights and $25 to $60 per acre per season for weekly monitoring programs. Unlike spraying, monitoring requires only FAA Part 107 with no Part 137 or state applicator license, though night operations or BVLOS work need specific FAA waivers.

Typical rate: $3 to $10/acre(per acre per flight)

Crop Health Monitoring on top Montana crops

In Montana, crop health monitoring is most commonly used on:

Prices reflect 2026 industry-typical drone spraying rates by crop. Pair with the operator-stated rates below for a quote tailored to your fields.

Aerial pesticide licensing in Montana

Montana requires Category 18: Aerial Applicator for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is Montana Department of Agriculture (MDA).

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

Crop Health Monitoring drone operators in Montana

Townsend, MT

Townsend-based ag drone operator offering precision spraying, spreading, crop health imaging and detailed mapping for Montana farmers and ranchers.

Drone SprayingAerial MappingCrop Scouting+1 more
Price on request
Southwest Montana, MT

Southwest Montana ag drone operator. Provides crop and pasture spraying, broadcast seeding, multispectral and thermal imaging. Offers variable rate applications and shareable KML files.

FAA Part 107 โœ“
Drone SprayingCover Crop SeedingCrop Scouting+1 more
Price on request

Primary sources for crop health monitoring

Federal regulators and industry references that govern crop health monitoring in Montana and across the United States.

FAQ: crop health monitoring in Montana

2 operators in our directory list crop health monitoring as a service in Montana. Use the operator grid below to compare credentials, fleet, response time and pricing before reaching out.