Updated July 2026 · Prices move on Amazon, confirm before buying

Parts, Batteries, and Accessories: The Stuff You Reorder All Season

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The drone is the one-time purchase. Everything below is what keeps it working, and a lot of it wears out or gets consumed on a schedule. This page is the running list of what owners actually reorder. A note first: for the drone itself, model-specific parts like propellers, arms, pumps, and the smart batteries designed for your aircraft should come from your dealer or the manufacturer, because fit and safety matter more than saving a few dollars. The items below are the general-purpose gear and consumables where a marketplace makes sense.

One safety line up front. You are handling agricultural chemicals. Proper protective equipment is not an accessory, it is the difference between a routine day and a hospital visit. Do not skip the PPE.

Batteries and Charging

Flight batteries

The big smart batteries are the single largest running cost of drone spraying. They get charged hard, discharged deep, and cycled all day, and they wear out. You want enough of them to keep flying while others charge, and you should plan on replacing them over the drone's life. For a working operation, batteries are a budget line, not a one-time buy. Buy the exact battery your model calls for.

Browse drone flight batteries on Amazon

Chargers and field power

Fast charging is what keeps a spray day moving, and out in a field you need your own power. Most serious operators run a portable inverter generator sized to their charger so they can turn batteries around at the edge of the field instead of driving back to the shed.

Browse chargers on Amazon Browse field generators on Amazon

Spray System Consumables

Nozzles and pumps

Nozzles wear, clog, and get swapped to change droplet size for different jobs. Keeping spare nozzles and a spare pump on hand means a clog does not end your spray day. Match the nozzle type and thread to your drone's spray system.

Browse spray nozzles and pumps on Amazon

Mixing and transfer tanks

You mix and load chemical between every few flights, so a dedicated mixing or transfer tank with good measurement markings and a clean-water rinse supply saves time and reduces mistakes. Keep it separate from anything used for potable water.

Browse mixing and transfer tanks on Amazon

Protective Equipment

Handling and mixing pesticides puts you closest to the chemical, closer than the spraying itself. A proper respirator with the right cartridges, chemical-resistant gloves, eye protection, and a spray suit are the baseline. Read your product labels for the specific protection each chemical requires, because the label is the law and it tells you exactly what to wear.

Browse pesticide-handling PPE on Amazon

What to Buy From Your Dealer Instead

To be straight with you, some things should not come from a marketplace. Model-specific propellers, arms, ESCs, the flight controller, and the smart batteries engineered for your exact drone are safety-critical and fit-critical. Buy those from your authorized dealer or the manufacturer. A cheap look-alike propeller is not a bargain when it fails over a field with a full tank overhead.

Stock spare nozzles, keep enough batteries to outrun your charger, run a field generator, use a dedicated mixing tank, and never cut corners on PPE. Buy consumables and general gear where it is convenient, and buy safety-critical, model-specific parts from your dealer. That split keeps you flying and keeps you safe.

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