How have drones moved from hobby gadgets to major tools in global agriculture?
Drones have become integrated into everyday life over the past decade in sectors as diverse as entertainment, health care and construction. They also have begun to transform the way people grow food.
Just a few years ago, agricultural drones were expensive, small and difficult to use, limiting their appeal to farmers. In contrast, today’s models can be flown immediately after purchase and carry loads weighing up to 220 pounds the weight of two sacks of fertilizer.
Agricultural drones are now akin to flying tractors multifunctional machines that can perform numerous tasks using different hardware attachments. Common uses for drones on farms include spraying crops, spreading fertilizer, sowing seeds, transporting produce, dispensing fish feeds, painting greenhouses, monitoring livestock locations and well-being, mapping field topography and drainage, and measuring crop health. This versatility makes drones valuable for growing numerous crops and on farms of all sizes.
Where are agricultural drones used, and why has their use increased so quickly?
In a new study published in the journal Science, we show that use of agricultural drones has spread extremely rapidly around the world. In our research as social scientists studying agriculture and rural development, we set out to document where agricultural drones have taken off around the world, what they are doing and why they have traveled so far so fast. We also explored what these changes mean for farmers, the environment, the public and governments.
Historically, most agricultural technology tractors, for example has spread from high-income countries to middle- and then lower-income ones over the course of many decades. Drones partially reversed and dramatically accelerated this pattern, diffusing first from East Asia to Southeast Asia, then to Latin America, and finally to North America and Europe. Their use in higher-income regions is more limited but is accelerating rapidly in the U.S.
China leads the world in agricultural drone manufacturing and adoption. In 2016, a Chinese company introduced the first agriculture-specific quadcopter model. There are now more than 250,000 agricultural drones reported to be in use there. Other middle-income countries have also been enthusiastic adopters. For instance, drones were used on 30% of Thailand’s farmland in 2023, up from almost none in 2019, mainly for spraying pesticides and spreading fertilizers.
In the U.S., the number of agricultural drones registered with the Federal Aviation Administration leaped from about 1,000 in January 2024 to around 5,500 in mid-2025. Industry reports suggest those numbers substantially underreport U.S. drone use because some owners avoid the complex registration process. Agricultural drones in the U.S. are used mainly for spraying crops such as corn and soybeans, especially in areas that are difficult to reach with tractors or crop-dusting aircraft.
Source : msu.edu