Drone Sprayers in Brown County, South Dakota
3 agricultural drone operators serve Brown County. Compare certifications, per-acre pricing, and reviews, then request free quotes.
Drone crop spraying in Brown County
3 for-hire drone-spraying operators cover Brown County, South Dakota. South Dakota's corn, soybeans, wheat, and sunflowers run from the prairie pothole region west to rangeland, giving drones high-acreage, wide-open work.
Growers in the Great Plains hire drone applicators to put fungicides, herbicides, and fertility on the right way at the right time — over canopies too tall to drive through, ground too wet to roll on, and fields too small or oddly shaped for a self-propelled sprayer. Compare operators serving Brown County above, then request free quotes.
Crops drone operators treat near Brown County
Licensing for drone spraying in South Dakota
Spraying crops by drone for hire is regulated federally (an FAA Part 107 remote pilot certificate and a Part 137 agricultural aircraft operator certificate, plus a Section 44807 exemption for drones over 55 lbs) and by the state — applying pesticides commercially in South Dakota requires a license from the South Dakota Department of Agriculture. Look for these credentials on each operator’s profile on Ag Drone Sprayers.
Drone spraying in Brown County: frequently asked questions
- Can I hire a drone to spray my fields in Brown County?
- Yes. 3 for-hire drone-spraying operators on Ag Drone Sprayers cover Brown County, applying fungicides, herbicides, and fertility by drone. Compare them above by FAA certification, equipment, per-acre pricing, and grower reviews, then request free quotes.
- How much does drone spraying cost in Brown County?
- Operators serving Brown County charge by the acre, and rates move with the crop, total acreage, the product applied, and field obstacles. Request quotes from a few nearby operators to compare — our drone-spraying cost calculator gives you a ballpark to start from.
- Which crops do drone operators spray around Brown County?
- Around Brown County, drone operators most often treat corn, soybeans and wheat. Drones are especially valuable for tall canopies, wet or flooded ground, and steep or irregular fields where a ground sprayer can't go without compaction or crop loss.
- Do operators in Brown County need a license?
- Yes. Commercial drone spraying requires an FAA Part 137 agricultural aircraft operator certificate (plus a Part 107 remote pilot certificate, and a Section 44807 exemption for drones over 55 lbs) and a commercial pesticide applicator license from the South Dakota Department of Agriculture. Every operator listed on Ag Drone Sprayers is asked to document these credentials.
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