Rice Drone Spraying in Nevada
Agricultural drone services for rice in Nevada. Typical rate: $14 to $22/acre
In Nevada, drone spraying for rice sits within the broader state custom-rate band of $18 to $30/acre, with the most comparable per-acre range for rice applications running $14 to $22/acre. Nevada sits in the Great Plains region, which shapes the disease, drift and timing pressures local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Nevada require Core + Laws + Category (3 exams) from Nevada Department of Agriculture (NDA) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.
About rice drone spraying
Rice is grown on approximately 2.5 million US acres in Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi and Missouri. It is the single highest-density drone spray crop in America, because the flooded paddy conditions that define rice production make ground equipment impractical from flood-up through drain. Arkansas alone produces 1.2 million acres of rice and is effectively 100 percent aerial-treated for heading-stage fungicide. The University of Arkansas Extension reports 7 percent average yield improvement from fungicide applications timed at R4 to R6 for rice blast and sheath blight control. Drones have rapidly taken share from airplanes in rice over the past three years because they fly lower, produce less drift into sensitive neighboring soybeans and cover small odd-shaped levee fields where airplane turnarounds are inefficient. LSU AgCenter trials in Louisiana also show drone herbicide applications for barnyardgrass control matching ground-rig efficacy pre-flood. Operators serving the Arkansas and Mississippi rice market commonly run fleets of 3 to 8 DJI Agras T50 drones and treat 800 to 1,200 acres per day during the July and August peak heading window. Cal Poly research confirms similar performance for the California Sacramento Valley rice market, which runs a slightly later August and September calendar.
Application calendar for rice
Green months = optimal application window
Aerial pesticide licensing in Nevada
Nevada requires Core + Laws + Category (3 exams) for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is Nevada Department of Agriculture (NDA).
Full agency, exam and renewal-cycle details: Nevada state page · 50-state licensing reference · state extension service.
Rice drone operators in Nevada
No operators listed in Nevada yet
FAQ: rice drone spraying in Nevada
Drone spraying rates for rice in Nevada typically run $14 to $22/acre for application only; the farmer supplies the chemical product. State-level custom-rate guidance for Nevada averages $18 to $30/acre. Pricing varies based on total acreage, distance from the operator base and product type.
Optimal drone application timing for rice runs May, Jun, Jul, Aug. Exact timing depends on weather, growth stage and pest or disease pressure each season; contact a local operator in Nevada for scheduling at least 4 to 6 weeks ahead of the peak window.
Commercial drone pesticide application in Nevada 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 Core + Laws + Category (3 exams) from Nevada Department of Agriculture (NDA). Confirm any operator you hire holds all three before any application.
Drone spraying on rice 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.
R4 to R6, from late boot through full heading. University of Arkansas trials show the 7 percent yield response peaks in this window because both blast and sheath blight infect heads during panicle emergence. Spraying earlier than R3 is too short on residual coverage, spraying after R7 rarely recovers yield.
Lower drift, smaller turn radius, better access to small levee fields. Arkansas and Mississippi rice fields share borders with dicamba-sensitive and 2,4-D-sensitive soybeans and state regulators have tightened aerial drift rules every year. Drones flying 8 to 15 feet above the canopy with RTK-guided overlap hold drift within a much tighter corridor than airplanes flying 50 to 100 feet up.
Yes, most early-season rice herbicides (Command, Bolero, Facet L, Loyant) allow aerial application including by drone. LSU AgCenter and University of Arkansas Extension have published drone trial data for barnyardgrass control that matches ground-rig efficacy at 3 to 5 gallons per acre carrier.
Typical rates in the Arkansas Grand Prairie and Delta regions run $14 to $18 per acre for a single fungicide pass at heading, with large blocks over 500 acres sometimes priced at $12 to $14. California rice runs slightly higher, often $18 to $22 per acre, because of tighter CDPR restricted-material permit rules and fewer operators per acre.
Yes, in every rice-producing state. Arkansas requires a commercial pesticide applicator license plus an aerial sub-classification. California requires the Unmanned Pest Control Aircraft Pilot Certificate plus a QAC or QAL. Louisiana and Mississippi have slightly lighter requirements but still require an aerial applicator category endorsement. Your drone operator handles their own licensing, but you should ask to see certificates before booking.
Book by May for July and August heading applications. Arkansas Grand Prairie operators fill first and often have no capacity for late callers by June. California rice has a later August to September window but books similarly fast given the smaller number of licensed operators.