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Three new DJI drones just dropped — but not for you

After debuting them in China last year, DJI has now quietly launched three of its latest agriculture drones — the Agras T100, T70P, and T25P — for global markets.

The global rollout comes nearly eight months after DJI first unveiled the drones domestically in China. You can read our breakdown of the China launch here. Now, with the international version officially hitting the market, DJI is signaling a major expansion in the way agriculture is conducted worldwide.

Each of the new DJI Agras drones is built for a specific type of farm — whether it’s a massive commercial operation, a mid-sized grower, or a solo-run hillside orchard. But what they all have in common is the company’s hallmark of automation, safety, and sheer payload power.

DJI Agras T100: Built like a flying tractor

The Agras T100 is DJI’s most powerful agricultural drone to date. Designed for large-scale commercial operations, it can carry up to 100 liters for spraying or 150 liters for spreading — basically the kind of payload you’d expect from a tractor, not a drone. With flight speeds up to 20 m/s, it’s twice as efficient as its predecessor.

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The T100 features a spraying system that delivers up to 40 liters per minute (with the optional four-sprinkler setup), a redesigned screw feeder for spreading, and top-tier obstacle avoidance with LiDAR, millimeter-wave radar, and a Penta-Vision safety system.

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DJI Agras T70P drone: Power meets agility

The Agras T70P is a step down in payload but offers many of the same features as the T100, including the high flow rates, terrain mapping, and obstacle avoidance. With a 70-liter spray capacity and 100-liter spread capacity, this drone is ideal for mid-sized farms that need serious performance without the bulk.

It uses DJI’s new Safety System 3.0, which combines millimeter-wave radar and a Tri-Vision system to navigate tricky terrain and avoid obstacles with greater precision.

DJI Agras T25P: Small but fully capable agri drone

If you’re working alone or in tighter plots, the Agras T25P may be your best bet. It’s compact, foldable, and built for solo operations — but still carries a 20 kg payload and sprays at 16 liters per minute. Its droplet size can be adjusted between 50–500 μm, allowing for highly targeted applications.

Like its bigger siblings, the T25P features fully automated mapping and spraying capabilities, making it ideal for orchards, slopes, and fragmented farmland.

To complement the global launch, DJI is also kicking off a new agricultural drone training program through DJI Academy. The courses, starting in 15 countries across Asia and the Americas, will teach operators how to safely and efficiently fly these drones for crop spraying, spreading, and more.

As of today, DJI says 500,000 agriculture drones are already flying globally, helping farmers treat 300 types of crops across 100 countries. According to DJI Agriculture’s global sales head, Yuan Zhang, the demand continues to grow, and these next-gen drones are ready to meet it.

“With nearly 500,000 trained operators worldwide as of May, the industry is maturing, and the demand for spray drones continues to grow annually,” Zhang says. “With the next generation of DJI Agriculture drones, we continue to innovate how we farm and feed communities, while reducing the environmental costs to our planet.”

So, DJI’s new drones may not be flashy, but for the global food supply, they could be a quiet revolution in the making.

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Avatar for Ishveena Singh Ishveena Singh

Ishveena Singh is a versatile journalist and writer with a passion for drones and location technologies. She has been named as one of the 50 Rising Stars of the geospatial industry for the year 2021 by Geospatial World magazine.