Drone Spraying Services in Bihar
Drone crop spraying in Bihar typically costs ₹400–₹550 per acre for paddy, wheat and maize, with sugarcane towards ₹500–₹600 for tall late-season cane. CropWings serves Bihar via its pilot network — availability varies by district, so check the app. The Kosi–Seemanchal rabi maize belt and the paddy–wheat plain see the heaviest demand.
Bihar's Gangetic plain runs a tight paddy–wheat rotation, but the state's fastest-growing drone use case is the Kosi–Seemanchal maize belt — Purnia, Katihar, Madhepura and Khagaria grow some of India's highest-yielding rabi maize. Sugarcane holds the north-west around West Champaran and Gopalganj, Muzaffarpur's shahi litchi orchards need precisely timed sprays, and the makhana ponds of Darbhanga and Madhubani round out one of the country's most varied cropping maps.
Holdings in Bihar are small and fragmented, which is exactly where drone spraying pays off: neighbours pool fields into one booking and split a job that covers each acre in under ten minutes. CropWings serves Bihar through its pilot network, subject to pilot availability in your district — check the app for live coverage around Patna, Muzaffarpur, Purnia and Bhagalpur. Standing water after the monsoon and tall late-season sugarcane, both hard to spray manually, are handled from the bund.
Districts in Bihar
CropWings pilots take bookings across Bihar, including Araria, Arwal, Aurangabad, Banka, Begusarai, Bhagalpur, Bhojpur, Buxar, Darbhanga, East Champaran, Gaya Ji (formerly Gaya), Gopalganj, Jamui, Jehanabad, Kaimur (Bhabua), Katihar, Khagaria, Kishanganj, Lakhisarai, Madhepura, Madhubani, Munger, Muzaffarpur, Nalanda, Nawada, Patna, Purnia, Rohtas, Saharsa, Samastipur, Saran, Sheikhpura, Sheohar, Sitamarhi, Siwan, Supaul, Vaishali, West Champaran. Availability varies by season — check live pilot coverage for your village in the app.
Crops we spray in Bihar
Pilots in Bihar also cover masoor (lentil), mustard, litchi, banana, makhana, potato — ask for a quote in the app.
Season guide
Kharif paddy: June–October, spraying peaks August–September for stem borer and blast. Rabi wheat: November–April, with aphid and blight rounds in January–February. Rabi maize in the Kosi belt is sown October–November and sprayed December–February. Sugarcane in West Champaran takes top-borer rounds pre-monsoon; Muzaffarpur litchi needs tightly timed pre-flowering and pre-harvest sprays in February–April.
How to book in Bihar
1. Download & Register. Install the CropWings app from the Play Store or App Store and create your farmer profile in minutes.
2. Find Nearby Pilots. View available drone pilots near your farm, compare pricing, ratings, and availability.
3. Contact & Get Service. Connect with a pilot directly through the app, discuss your crop and land details, and schedule the service easily.
4. Unlock Your Discount. Have a service coupon? Apply it instantly during booking to get premium drone spraying at a special rate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the drone spraying price per acre for wheat and maize in Bihar?
Expect roughly ₹400–₹550 per acre for wheat, paddy and rabi maize across the plain districts — Rohtas, Nalanda, Purnia, Katihar — with pooled village bookings pricing at the lower end. Tall sugarcane in West Champaran or Gopalganj runs closer to ₹500–₹600 because of flight planning over dense canopy. Final per-acre rates show in the CropWings app before confirmation.
How do I book a drone sprayer in Bihar and which districts are covered?
Book from the CropWings app: mark your plot, select crop and chemical, and choose a slot. Bihar is served through the CropWings pilot network, subject to pilot availability in your district — the app shows current coverage, strongest around the Patna, Muzaffarpur, Purnia and Bhagalpur corridors. Pooling neighbouring fields into one booking gets a pilot allotted faster and lowers the per-acre rate.
Which crops in Bihar are best suited for drone spraying?
Paddy and wheat take routine pesticide and fungicide rounds; rabi maize in the Kosi–Seemanchal belt suits drones for fall armyworm control once the crop is too tall to walk. Late-season sugarcane — near impossible to spray manually — is a natural drone job, and litchi orchards in Muzaffarpur use drones for uniform pre-harvest sprays. Makhana ponds are generally not drone-sprayed.
Is drone spraying legal in Bihar? Does the pilot need a DGCA licence?
Yes. India's Drone Rules, 2021 govern agricultural spraying: the drone must be DGCA type-certified and registered on the Digital Sky platform, and the operator must hold a Remote Pilot Certificate issued through a DGCA-authorised training organisation. Every CropWings pilot is verified against these requirements, and the app confirms your field sits in permissible airspace before the job is scheduled.
Book drone spraying in Bihar
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