College Station, Texas sits in Brazos County, an ag-relevant region with statewide drone-spray operator coverage available; this page surfaces the crops, rates and licensing context for College Station farmers booking work. Home of Texas A&M University and AgriLife Extension; central Texas ag research and services hub. Primary crops in Texas include cotton and wheat, each with established 2026 drone-spray rate bands. Texas drone application rates run $12 to $20/acre depending on field size, crop and application timing, in line with 2026 statewide benchmarks. Every operator working over Texas fields must hold FAA Part 107 plus Category 9 (Aerial Application) from TDA, and many also carry FAA Part 137 for commercial agricultural aircraft operations. Contact statewide operators in the Texas directory below for College Station availability, or list your business free if you serve College Station.
0
Listed operators
$12 to $20/acre
Texas rate range
Cotton, Wheat
Top crops served
Drone operators serving TexasNo operator listed at the College Station city level yet. 29 statewide operators cover Texas and most can serve College Station fields with reasonable travel.
Precision Air Ag serves wheat and corn producers across the Great Plains from our base in central Kansas. 5-drone fleet capable of 200+ acres per day. Our team handles wheat fungicide at heading, corn fungicide at tassel and cotton defoliation across Kansas, Oklahoma and Nebraska. FAA Part 137 certified with $3M liability coverage.
American-made NDAA-compliant ag drones & operator network
Hylio designs and manufactures the AG-272, the leading NDAA-compliant agricultural spray drone in the United States and supports a national network of certified Hylio operators. The company provides sales, training and operator support for federal programs, defense-adjacent ag operations and buyers requiring US-manufactured drone equipment.
Verified OperatorFAA Part 107 ✓NDAA Compliant ✓
Drone SprayingFertilizer ApplicationCover Crop Seeding+2 more
Texas Ag Drones LLC is one of the largest ag drone operations in Texas, with a 7-drone fleet covering cotton, grain sorghum, winter wheat and pasture brush control. We specialize in cotton defoliant applications in the Rolling Plains and South Texas, and handle mesquite and cedar brush control in rangeland where ground equipment cannot reach.
Verified OperatorFAA Part 137 ✓FAA Part 107 ✓
Drone SprayingFertilizer ApplicationEmergency Response+1 more
AR · nationwide DJI dealer + custom aerial applicator since 2021
Nationwide dealer of agricultural spray drones and aerial commercial applicator based in Arkansas, founded 2021. Specializes in personalized customer care offering sales, service, parts, repair and custom spraying. Holds both FAA Part 107 and Part 137 certifications.
Texas-based operator covering TX, OK, and NM. Retired ag teacher Rod Brents combines traditional ranching with drone technology. Services include spraying, brush control (Brush Bullet), pasture management, right-of-way and solar farm spraying.
East Texas specialist. Three spray crews. Serves 2-hour radius from Palestine and Longview.
Drone Spraying
Price on request
College Station ag-county context
College Station sits in Brazos County with a population of approximately 120,511 (US Census Bureau Places).
Home of Texas A&M University and AgriLife Extension; central Texas ag research and services hub.
Sources: USDA NASS Census of Agriculture (county-level cropland and farm-receipts tables) and US Census Bureau Places gazetteer. Confirm exact figures via primary source for any decision-grade use.
Rate ranges from national crop benchmarks. Texas statewide range: $12 to $20/acre. Estimate your job →
Required credentials for drone operators serving College Station
Commercial agricultural drone application in Texas requires the federal FAA Part 137 certificate plus Category 9 (Aerial Application) from TDA. Read the federal rules in the FAA Part 137 guide and the state-by-state breakdown on state pesticide licensing.
Verify College Station drone operator credentials
Primary-source references for verifying ag drone operator credentials in Texas and federally.
Use the spray cost calculator to model College Station jobs against the $12 to $20/acre state range. Pin down acres, target crop (most College Station jobs are cotton), and whether you need application only or chemical-included pricing.
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Verify FAA Part 137 and Texas licensing
Confirm the operator holds FAA Part 107, FAA Part 137 and Category 9 (Aerial Application). 0 of 0 College Station operators in this directory list Part 137. Ask for a copy of their certificate and state license number before signing.
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Book the application window early
Cotton treatment in Texas typically lands in the Jun to Oct window. Demand spikes in peak season, so contact 2 to 3 of the College Station operators below 4 to 6 weeks ahead with field maps, target product and a preferred date range. Confirm insurance certificates name your farm as additional insured before the first flight.
Drone spraying in College Station typically runs $12 to $20/acre, in line with the broader Texas 2026 benchmark. Application-only rates exclude chemical, and quotes vary based on field size, terrain and crop. Cotton jobs in Texas sit toward the lower end of that range when fields are large and contiguous. Use the spray cost calculator to model your specific acreage before requesting quotes.
College Station does not yet have an operator listed at the city level, but 29 drone operators cover Texas statewide and most can serve College Station fields with reasonable travel. See the statewide grid below or use the spray cost calculator to estimate a job before reaching out. If you provide drone services in College Station, list your business free to anchor this page.
Any operator booking commercial drone pesticide application over College Station fields needs three credentials: FAA Part 107 (Remote Pilot Certificate) for the pilot, FAA Part 137 (Agricultural Aircraft Operator Certificate) for the business, and Category 9 (Aerial Application) from TDA. Confirm all three before any application; many operators also carry NDAA Section 848 compliance for cost-share eligible work.