Expand mobile version menu
  Skip to main content

Agricultural Equipment Operator

salary graphic

AVG. SALARY

$42,500

education graphic

EDUCATION

No standard requirement

job outlook graphic

JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

What They Do

Agricultural Equipment Operators Career Video

About This Career

Drives and controls equipment to support agricultural activities such as tilling soil; planting, cultivating, and harvesting crops; feeding and herding livestock; or removing animal waste. May perform tasks such as crop baling or hay bucking. May operate stationary equipment to perform post-harvest tasks such as husking, shelling, threshing, and ginning.

This career is part of the Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources cluster Power, Structural and Technical Systems pathway.

A person in this career:

  • Loads and unloads crops or containers of materials, manually or using conveyors, handtrucks, forklifts, or transfer augers.
  • Mixes specified materials or chemicals, and dumps solutions, powders, or seeds into planter or sprayer machinery.
  • Sprays fertilizer or pesticide solutions to control insects, fungus and weed growth, and diseases, using hand sprayers.
  • Observes and listens to machinery operation to detect equipment malfunctions.
  • Manipulates controls to set, activate, and adjust mechanisms on machinery.
  • Operates or tends equipment used in agricultural production, such as tractors, combines, and irrigation equipment.
  • Adjusts, repairs, and services farm machinery and notifies supervisors when machinery malfunctions.
  • Attaches farm implements such as plows, discs, sprayers, or harvesters to tractors, using bolts and hand tools.
  • Loads hoppers, containers, or conveyors to feed machines with products, using forklifts, transfer augers, suction gates, shovels, or pitchforks.
  • Directs and monitors the activities of work crews engaged in planting, weeding, or harvesting activities.

Working Conditions and Physical Demands

People who do this job report that:

  • You would often handle loads up to 20 lbs., sometimes up to 50 lbs. You might do a lot of lifting, carrying, pushing or pulling.
  • Exposure to pollutants, gases, dust, fumes, odors, poor ventilation, etc.
  • Conditions are very hot (above 90 F) or very cold (under 32 F)
  • Work in this occupation requires being outside most of the time

Working in this career involves (physical activities):

  • Judging how far away an object is, or which of several objects is closer or farther away
  • Bending, stretching, twisting, or reaching
  • Seeing clearly at a distance
  • Detecting sounds and hearing the differences between sounds of different pitch and loudness
  • Seeing clearly up close
  • Speaking clearly enough to be able to be understood by others
  • Identifying and understanding the speech of another person
  • Lifting, pushing, pulling, or carrying objects
  • Using abdominal and lower back muscles repeatedly or over time without tiring

Work Hours and Travel

  • Irregular hours
  • Overtime work
  • Seasonal work
  • Weekend work

Specialty and Similar Careers

Careers that are more detailed or close to this career:

  • Baler Operator — Operates and tends machines that compresses and binds paper, cloth, or other loose materials.
  • Cutter Operator
  • Equipment Operator
  • Hay Baler
  • Rake Operator
  • Sprayer
  • Packing Tractor Machine Operator
  • Loader Operator
  • Farm Equipment Operator
  • Windrower Operator
Powered by XAP

© 2010 - XAP


OCAP believes that financial literacy and understanding the financial aid process are critical aspects of college planning and student success. OCAP staff who work with students, parents, educators and community partners in the areas of personal finance education, state and federal financial aid, and student loan management do not provide financial, investment, legal, and/or tax advice. This website and all information provided is for general educational purposes only, and is not intended to be construed as financial, investment, legal, and/or tax advice.