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Lake States

Drone Spraying in Wisconsin

Apply fungicides, herbicides, insecticides, and defoliants with precision from the air.

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How drone spraying works

Drone spraying is the most requested agricultural drone service in the United States. Commercial spray drones fly 8 to 15 feet above the crop canopy at 12 to 15 mph, applying fungicides, herbicides, insecticides, defoliants, and foliar nutrients at carrier volumes of 2 to 5 gallons per acre. Rotor downwash forces droplets into the canopy for coverage comparable to ground rigs at one-fifth the water volume. Drones are most valuable when fields are too wet for ground equipment, crops are too tall for tractor-mounted sprayers, or small and irregular fields make airplane application impractical.

Typical rate: $12โ€“$18/acre

Drone Spraying drone operators in Wisconsin

Ames, IA
Featured

Corn Belt leader ยท 80,000+ acres serviced

AgriForce Drone Services is a full-service agricultural drone applicator based in central Iowa, serving the Corn Belt since 2020. FAA Part 107 and Part 137 certified fleet of 8 drones. Specializing in corn fungicide at tassel, soybean applications, and fall cover crop seeding. Record: 1,200 acres treated in a single night.

Drone SprayingCover Crop SeedingCrop Scouting+1 more
$12โ€“$18/acre
80K ac 8FAA
Peoria, IL

Illinois soybean & corn ยท 100 acres/day

Heartland Drone Co. is an Illinois-based drone applicator serving corn and soybean producers across the upper Midwest. Single-operator, 2-drone setup capable of 100+ acres per day. We keep our overhead low and pass the savings to you โ€” flat rate $14/acre for any field over 40 acres, no trip fee within 60 miles of Peoria.

Drone SprayingCover Crop Seeding
$13โ€“$16/acre
18K ac 2FAA

FAQ: drone spraying in Wisconsin

Most operators charge $12 to $18 per acre for application only, with the farmer supplying the chemical product. Rates vary by region, field size, terrain, and product type. Small or irregularly shaped fields typically cost more per acre than large, open tracts.

A single commercial spray drone covers 20 to 50 acres per hour depending on the application rate, field layout, and drone model. A DJI Agras T50 averages 30 to 40 acres per hour in real-world conditions. Multi-drone fleets multiply throughput proportionally.

Operators must hold an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate, an FAA Part 137 Agricultural Aircraft Operator Certificate or valid exemption, and their state's pesticide applicator license with an aerial endorsement. They must also carry liability insurance.

There are 2 operators offering drone spraying drone services in Wisconsin: AgriForce Drone Services LLC, Heartland Drone Co..