Are autonomous tractors and farm automation actually cost-effective? In this episode of the Purdue Commercial AgCast, Chad Fiechter and Josh Strine discuss new research on the economics of large-scale autonomous farm machinery and what it means for machinery investment and labor strategy on commercial corn and soybean farms. The results show that under today’s performance and cost levels, most farms aren’t yet in the economic “ballpark” for autonomy — helping producers understand when it could make sense and when it likely doesn’t.
The conversation covers machinery efficiency, hardware and software costs, labor wages, and equipment operating hours, along with how these factors affect profitability in whole-farm systems. It also explores where autonomous equipment might work first — including labor-constrained farms, expansion situations, and specific field operations — and how future improvements in technology could shift the outlook.
📄 Research article: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atech.2025.101599
🌐 Article summary: https://purdue.ag/3Ze0oir
🌐 Purdue Center for Commercial Agriculture: http://purdue.edu/commercialag
📝 Transcript: https://purdue.ag/3ObvyET
🎧 Subscribe to audio: https://purdue.ag/agcast
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