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Drone Spraying Services in Haryana

Wheat and paddy drone spraying in Haryana typically costs ₹400–₹500 per acre, with cotton at ₹450–₹550. Farmers book DGCA-certified pilots through the CropWings app; coverage runs via the CropWings pilot network across all 23 districts, subject to pilot availability. On Haryana's flat, consolidated fields a drone finishes an acre in roughly seven minutes.

Haryana runs on the wheat–paddy rotation: Basmati out of Karnal, Kurukshetra and Kaithal, cotton across the Sirsa–Fatehabad–Hisar–Bhiwani dry belt, sugarcane feeding the Yamunanagar mills, and mustard in the southern districts of Rewari, Mahendragarh and Charkhi Dadri. Its consolidated, laser-levelled fields are ideal drone country. The January–February yellow-rust window on wheat is exactly when walking a sprayer through a closed canopy destroys standing crop — a drone puts fungicide on without a single trampling track.

Nationally, CropWings pilots have put spray on 500,000+ acres for 100,000+ farmers in 200+ districts. In Haryana, service runs via the CropWings pilot network across all 23 districts — including newly notified Hansi — subject to pilot availability in your district; the app shows live serviceability. Flat, rectangular holdings mean fast turnaround: a pilot can clear 20–25 acres of wheat in a day, and whitefly rounds on cotton in the western belt are a growing use case.

Districts in Haryana

CropWings pilots take bookings across Haryana, including Ambala, Bhiwani, Charkhi Dadri, Faridabad, Fatehabad, Gurugram, Hansi, Hisar, Jhajjar, Jind, Kaithal, Karnal, Kurukshetra, Mahendragarh, Nuh, Palwal, Panchkula, Panipat, Rewari, Rohtak, Sirsa, Sonipat, Yamunanagar. Availability varies by season — check live pilot coverage for your village in the app.

Crops we spray in Haryana

Wheat — ₹399–₹499/acrePaddy (Rice) — ₹399–₹525/acreCotton — ₹450–₹600/acreSugarcane — ₹470–₹600/acre

Pilots in Haryana also cover mustard, bajra (pearl millet), barley, guar (cluster bean), sunflower, potato, vegetables — ask for a quote in the app.

Season guide

Rabi wheat goes in through November; yellow-rust and aphid sprays concentrate in January–February and harvest wraps by mid-April. Paddy transplanting starts mid-June under the state's subsoil-water rules, with blast, false-smut and brown-planthopper rounds in August–September. Cotton is sown April–May in the western belt, with whitefly and pink-bollworm pressure from July to September. Mustard aphid sprays in south Haryana and late-season tall-cane rounds around Yamunanagar fill December–January.

How to book in Haryana

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 rate per acre for wheat in Haryana?

Typically ₹400–₹500 per acre for wheat, and about the same for paddy; cotton runs ₹450–₹550 because of the taller late-season canopy. Large consolidated blocks in Karnal, Kaithal or Sirsa land at the lower end, and multi-farmer group bookings on adjoining killas reduce it further. The final quote for your acreage and chemical shows in the CropWings app.

How do I book a spray drone in Haryana — does CropWings cover Sirsa and Karnal?

Book in the CropWings app: mark your field, select crop and chemical, and pick a slot. Haryana is covered via the CropWings pilot network, subject to pilot availability in your district — the app shows whether Sirsa, Karnal, Hansi or any of the 23 districts is serviceable for your village that week. Peak rust-season slots in January fill early.

Which crops in Haryana are best suited for drone spraying?

Wheat is the flagship — late-season rust fungicide with zero trampling tracks. Basmati paddy benefits from uniform, label-rate application, which matters for export-bound consignments. Cotton in the Sirsa–Fatehabad–Hisar belt gets whitefly and pink-bollworm rounds on plants too tall for shoulder pumps, and standing sugarcane around Yamunanagar is practical to spray only from the air.

Is drone spraying legal in Haryana? What licence does the pilot need?

Yes — legal under the DGCA's Drone Rules 2021. The pilot must hold a Remote Pilot Certificate and fly a UIN-registered drone; the farmer needs no licence. Airspace needs care here: NCR districts like Gurugram, Faridabad and Nuh sit near Delhi's controlled zone, and Ambala and Sirsa host air-force stations, so CropWings pilots clear every flight against the Digital Sky map.

Book drone spraying in Haryana

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