Career Guide · Ag Pilot

How to Become an Ag Pilot (Crop Duster) — Training, Pay & The Real Path

Written by a working tradesperson · IBEW · Class A CDL  |  Updated July 2026

What's in this guide

What ag flying actually is

Aerial application — crop dusting — is precision, low-level flying: seeding, spraying, and protecting the crops that feed the country, at 140+ mph, ten feet off the deck. It is some of the most demanding stick-and-rudder work in aviation, flown in purpose-built aircraft like the Air Tractor. It is seasonal, intense, and pays like the skilled trade it is — experienced ag pilots regularly clear six figures in a season, and owner-operators far more. Farm-country states (the Delta, the Plains, California's valleys) are the heart of it.

The path in — it is different

Ag does not run on airline-style hiring. The route: commercial certificate (same ladder as every pilot: private → instrument → commercial, ~250 hours) plus a tailwheel endorsement and real low-level training — a handful of dedicated ag-flying schools teach exactly this. Then the part nobody skips: most ag pilots start on the ground crew — loading, mixing, flagging for an operator — learning the chemicals, the fields, and the business before they ever fly a load. Operators hire pilots they trust from their own crews. You will also need your state's commercial applicator license for the chemical side. It is an apprenticeship in everything but name, and it filters for the serious.

What ag pilots earn

Ground crew / loader (learning years)$35-55k
First-seat ag pilot$60-100k / season
Experienced ag pilot$100-200k+ / season
Owner-operatorthe sky is the limit — literally

Pay is usually a base plus a percentage of the acres you spray, so hustle and skill show up directly in the check. Off-seasons, many ag pilots fly south (or do not work at all — the season pays for the year).

Common questions

Do crop dusters really make six figures?

Experienced ag pilots commonly earn $100k+ in a season on base-plus-percentage pay, and owner-operators substantially more. First seats run $60-100k while you prove yourself.

How do you get your first ag flying job?

Almost always by working an operator's ground crew first — loading and flagging while you build trust. Operators hire from their own crews; showing up for a season is the real application.

What licenses do ag pilots need?

A commercial pilot certificate, a tailwheel endorsement, low-level/ag-specific training, and your state's commercial pesticide applicator license.

Is ag flying dangerous?

It is low-level, high-workload flying and it demands respect — that is exactly why the training path runs through ground crew and dedicated ag schools. Modern aircraft, GPS guidance, and disciplined operators have made the work far safer than its old reputation.

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