Employee-owned precision technology dealer. Key Mountain West hub for ag drone sales. Has physical offices in CO, MT, ID and serves additional states.
Wheat Drone Spraying in Utah
Agricultural drone services for wheat in Utah. Typical rate: $12 to $16/acre
In Utah, drone spraying for wheat sits within the broader state custom-rate band of $16 to $25/acre, with the most comparable per-acre range for wheat applications running $12 to $16/acre. Utah runs 200K acres of wheat; Northern UT. Utah sits in the Great Plains region, which shapes the disease, drift and timing pressures local operators plan around. Commercial drone applications in Utah require Category 11: Aerial Application. "Special qualifications" for aerial beyond standard exam. from Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (UDAF) on top of FAA Part 137 certification.
About wheat drone spraying
Winter and spring wheat total approximately 45 million US acres annually, with the Great Plains (Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota) and Pacific Northwest (Washington, Idaho) as the primary markets. The critical drone application window is T3 at heading, when Fusarium head blight (scab), stripe rust and leaf rust do their worst damage. The USDA ARS Wheat Scab Initiative estimates proper fungicide timing reduces deoxynivalenol (DON) mycotoxin contamination by 40 to 60 percent, which is the difference between food-grade wheat and discounted feed wheat at the elevator. Drones are rapidly gaining market share against airplane applicators on wheat, with most Great Plains operators running DJI Agras T50 and Hylio AG-272 for the 1,000+ gallons-per-day throughput the heading window demands, especially on fields under 500 acres where airplane mobilization cost makes per-acre pricing uncompetitive. Kansas State Extension trials show drone applications at 2 to 3 gallons per acre match airplane efficacy at 2 to 5 gallons, and NDSU Extension has published similar data for North Dakota hard red spring wheat. The compression of the heading window (often just 5 to 7 days) makes local drone operator capacity a real constraint, and wheat growers who line up their applicator in April for a July spray usually get better pricing than last-minute callers.
Application calendar for wheat
Green months = optimal application window
Aerial pesticide licensing in Utah
Utah requires Category 11: Aerial Application. "Special qualifications" for aerial beyond standard exam. for aerial pesticide application. The licensing authority is Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (UDAF).
Full agency, exam and renewal-cycle details: Utah state page · 50-state licensing reference · state extension service.
Wheat drone operators in Utah(all operators in state)
Authorized DJI Agras dealer. One-stop shop for ag drones, parts and service. Operates spray hubs across Idaho. Sprayed thousands of acres. $15 to $22/acre.
DJI Agras distributor for western US. Demonstrated DJI T40 in Choteau, MT. T40 bundle approx. $34,000. Can run 4 drones simultaneously at 45 acres/hr.
Ag drone services with Part 107 and Part 137 certifications. Carries full liability coverage. Serves Utah and Idaho.
Fully licensed ag drone operator in Northern Utah. Part 107, Part 137, Utah Pesticide Applicator licensed. Carries spray drift insurance. Over 55 lbs UAS exemption.
Offers drone spraying services across Utah. Focuses on enhancing efficiency, reducing labor costs and increasing crop yields.
DJI Agras drone distributor for the western US with 5 Oregon dealer locations (Harrisburg, Hillsboro, Madras, Rickreall, Woodburn) plus dealers across 7 western states
FAQ: wheat drone spraying in Utah
Drone spraying rates for wheat in Utah typically run $12 to $16/acre for application only; the farmer supplies the chemical product. State-level custom-rate guidance for Utah averages $16 to $25/acre. Pricing varies based on total acreage, distance from the operator base and product type.
Optimal drone application timing for wheat runs May, Jun. Exact timing depends on weather, growth stage and pest or disease pressure each season; contact a local operator in Utah for scheduling at least 4 to 6 weeks ahead of the peak window.
Commercial drone pesticide application in Utah 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 Application. "Special qualifications" for aerial beyond standard exam. from Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (UDAF). Confirm any operator you hire holds all three before any application.
Drone spraying on wheat 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.
T3 at heading is the target, when roughly half the heads have emerged from the boot. This is a 5 to 7 day window that arrives in late May in Texas and southern Oklahoma, early June across Kansas and Nebraska and mid to late June in North Dakota. Spraying earlier than Feekes 10.5 (full head emergence) reduces scab control, spraying after full bloom reduces both DON control and yield response.
On fields under 500 acres, yes. Airplane operators have minimum ferry-charge and mobilization cost that pushes per-acre rates up for smaller fields. Drone operators based within an hour of the field can price $12 to $16 per acre comfortably, which is often below airplane quotes for sub-500-acre fields. Above 1,000 acres, airplanes still win on throughput.
Yes, when timed correctly. USDA ARS research shows T3 heading applications of Prosaro, Caramba or Miravis Ace reduce DON contamination by 40 to 60 percent in high-scab-pressure years. Drone versus airplane delivery method shows no statistical difference in DON reduction when carrier volume, product and timing are matched.
Most heading-stage wheat fungicides allow 2 to 5 gpa aerial application per label: Prosaro, Caramba, Miravis Ace, Preemptor and generics. Some require minimum droplet size specifications (coarse to medium) that certain drone nozzles meet and others do not. Always cross-check the label against your operator's nozzle setup.
April is the ideal call in the Great Plains. Heading windows across the region overlap badly and local operator capacity is the constraint, not chemical availability. Operators who pre-book their wheat customers in early spring usually pass late-season requests on to airplane or farther-away drones at higher rates.
Book in April for June heading applications. Great Plains operators fill slots by May. Small-acre growers are most likely to get squeezed out as large commercial wheat farms lock in capacity first.