Consulting services for new and expanding ag drone operators covering FAA Part 137 exemption paperwork, state licensing, insurance, operations manuals and business setup.
Ag Drone Business Consultancy drone services in Oregon are not yet listed by an operator in this directory; the page below covers what to look for and how the service works in Oregon. Typical pricing for ag drone business consultancy runs $100 to $4500/acre (per hour or per package). Oregon sits in the Great Plains region, which shapes the calendar, weather and competitive pressure local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Oregon require Aerial Pesticide Applicator (APA) license, a separate standalone add-on. from Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.
Ag Drone Business Consultancy โ quick facts
Ag drone business consultancy runs $100 to $300 per hour or $2,500 to $4,500 for a complete FAA Part 137 exemption prep package. Consultants help new operators through the 90 to 180 day FAA Part 137 approval process, state commercial applicator licensing, insurance procurement and operations manual drafting. Specialist providers include Rantizo Advisory, Precision Aerial Solutions and Part 137 Experts.
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How ag drone business consultancy works
Ag drone business consultancy is a niche but growing service category that helps new and expanding commercial operators work through the FAA Part 137 exemption process, state commercial pesticide applicator licensing, insurance procurement, operations manual drafting and business structure setup. Primary consulting providers include Rantizo Advisory, Precision Aerial Solutions, Part 137 Experts and independent consultants with FAA exemption experience. Typical engagements are billed either hourly ($100 to $300 per hour) or as flat-fee packages covering specific deliverables. The most common package is a complete FAA Part 137 exemption prep bundle at $2,500 to $4,500 that includes 44807 exemption petition drafting, operations manual templates, insurance referrals, state licensing guidance and follow-through coaching until FAA approval comes through. More specialized engagements include custom pricing models for regional markets, operator expansion strategy (single drone to fleet), M&A due diligence for operator acquisitions and regulatory defense if a state or FAA inquiry arises.
Typical rate: $100 to $4500/acre(per hour or per package)
Aerial pesticide licensing in Oregon
Oregon requires Aerial Pesticide Applicator (APA) license, a separate standalone add-on. for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA).
Pacific Northwest Ag Drone services apple and cherry orchards, wheat fields and hop yards across Washington, Oregon and Idaho. We navigate steep hillside orchards where ground equipment cannot operate and deliver precise fungicide applications for powdery mildew and fire blight control. Available March through October for orchard programs.
Austin Drone Solutions opened in 2025 and has covered over 2,500 acres across Washington, Oregon and Idaho. Their partnership with Parabug allows them to release beneficial insects via a patent-pending drone release system, implemented on their DJI Agras T25, making them one of the rare ag drone operators in the Pacific Northwest offering biocontrol services. They also provide spraying and spreading services on almost all crops and pasture ground using a DJI Agras T50, and are currently testing pollen applications at 10 GPA with Firman Pollen. Their trailer mixes up to 175 gallons per batch and carries 550 gallons of fresh water.
Verified OperatorFAA Part 137 โ
Drone SprayingFertilizer ApplicationCrop Scouting+1 more
Veteran-owned, family-operated. Northwest's first XAG, Vector and Ceres Air dealer. 25+ years in custom application. One of first licensed UAV applicators in ID and OR.
Corvallis-based company specializing in forestry herbicide spraying with proprietary ML software for precision application; clients include Starker Forests; spray program covered 4x expected acreage in 2023
DJI Agras drone distributor for the western US with 5 Oregon dealer locations (Harrisburg, Hillsboro, Madras, Rickreall, Woodburn) plus dealers across 7 western states
Veteran-owned UAS integrator partnering with Yamaha Motor to bring FAZER-R AP ag spraying drone to PNW; live demo at Sokol Blosser Winery, Willamette Valley (Sept 2025)
Family-owned Eugene business since 1948 now offering custom aerial drone application as precision, low-impact option; fully licensed per FAA and Oregon state requirements
Described as one of the largest drone service providers in WA state (WheatLife); covers ~30 ac/hr; active in cherry drying and beneficial insect deployment
Union Gap/Yakima, WA; Wenatchee, WA; Hood River, WA
Family-owned Yakima ag consulting/supply business using drones primarily for beneficial insect release in orchards; partners with M3 AgTech and Parabug
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
Eastern Oregon ag drone startup. Temple trained with Volatus Group at Pendleton UAS Test Range. Sprays approximately 3.5 acres per load cycle with 8-minute flight time. Holds FAA Section 44807 exemption.
Established 1946 ag co-op that launched drone program Feb 2023. Operates 4 drones with 5 crew. Sprayed approximately 19000 acres in 2024. Working with OSU on stink bug research in hazelnuts. One of the highest-volume drone spray programs in Oregon.
Agricultural and industrial drone services company based in Ellensburg. FAA Part 137 and Part 107 certified with pesticide applicator licenses in WA OR and ID. Serves federal/state agencies and private landowners across the PNW.
Largest US spray drone operator network with dedicated PNW hub staffed by 5 drone application specialists. PNW hub logged 350+ flight hours and 5000+ acres across 10+ crops. Partners with Simplot in Oregon and Washington. 200000+ acres flown nationally in 2023.
FAA Part 137 โFAA Part 107 โ
Drone SprayingPilot TrainingEquipment Sales
Price on request
Primary sources for ag drone business consultancy
Federal regulators and industry references that govern ag drone business consultancy in Oregon and across the United States.
Oregon does not yet have an operator in our directory listing ag drone business consultancy 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 ag drone business consultancy in Oregon.
Commercial ag drone business consultancy in Oregon 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 Aerial Pesticide Applicator (APA) license, a separate standalone add-on. from Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA). Confirm any operator you hire holds all three before any application.
Most Oregon operators book 4 to 6 weeks ahead of peak windows; pricing confirmation is contract-bound and operator-specific. For one-off jobs during peak demand spikes, supply tightens fast โ establishing the operator relationship in the off-season pays off.
Not strictly, but most new operators who try the FAA Part 137 exemption process alone experience 30 to 90 day delays from incomplete operations manuals or incorrect 44807 petition formatting. A consultant typically shortens the approval timeline by 60 to 120 days, which easily pays for itself in the first month of operation. DIY makes sense only if you have previous aviation certification experience.
A typical $2,500 to $4,500 package includes the 44807 exemption petition drafting, Part 137 operations manual drafting, training records templates, maintenance log templates, insurance broker referrals, state commercial applicator licensing guidance for your state and weekly coaching calls through FAA approval. Some packages also include first-customer contract templates and pricing model worksheets.
Yes, consultants with federal contracting background help operators decide between DJI (lowest cost, non-NDAA), Hylio (higher cost, NDAA-compliant) and mixed fleets. They also handle the federal contractor certification process if you plan to bid USDA, state or federally funded work. This specialty consulting typically runs $150 to $300 per hour.
With consultant support: 6 to 9 months. FAA Part 107 study and exam takes 2 to 4 weeks. State commercial pesticide applicator exam and license takes 1 to 3 months depending on state. FAA Part 137 plus 44807 exemption takes 90 to 180 days. Insurance binder and operations manual finalization adds 2 to 4 weeks. Most new operators target their first customer in the second calendar year after they start the process.
Yes, specifically for USDA EQIP Practice Code 595 (Precision Agriculture), USDA Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (BFRDP) and state-level precision ag grants. Grant writing support is typically billed separately at $500 to $2,500 per application, with some consultants offering contingency pricing (percentage of awarded grant value) for larger applications.