Farm Equipment Service Technician
Agriculture & Farming
Sell, select, and service agricultural or agribusiness technical equipment and facilities, including computers, specialized software, power units, machinery, equipment structures, and utilities.
What Farm Equipment Service Technicians Do
Sell, select, and service agricultural or agribusiness technical equipment and facilities, including computers, specialized software, power units, machinery, equipment structures, and utilities.
Common Tasks
- 1Keep abreast of developments in the field by reading current literature, talking with colleagues, and participating in professional conferences.
- 2Advise students on academic and vocational curricula and on career issues.
- 3Supervise undergraduate or graduate teaching, internship, and research work.
- 4Supervise laboratory sessions and field work and coordinate laboratory operations.
- 5Conduct research in a particular field of knowledge and publish findings in professional journals, books, or electronic media.
What You'll Learn
Work Environment
Locations
- • Farm equipment dealerships
- • Repair shops and service bays
- • On-farm service calls (field work)
- • Agribusiness and irrigation service companies
- • Equipment rental yards
Schedule
Most work full time on a set schedule, but busy seasons can bring overtime and urgent repairs under high time pressure.
Physical Demands
The job is physically demanding, with lots of standing, bending, kneeling, and handling heavy parts and tools. Field service can add outdoor work in heat, cold, dust, and uneven terrain.
Salary & Job Outlook
Top Paying States
Why Demand May Grow
Farms and agribusinesses continue to rely on increasingly complex, high-value machinery and precision-ag systems that require skilled diagnosis and repair. Replacement of aging equipment and steady food production needs can also support ongoing service demand.
Skills You'll Need
Pros & Cons
Pros
- • Strong hands-on work with clear results
- • Good demand in agricultural regions
- • Variety of equipment and daily tasks
- • Skills transfer to diesel, hydraulics, and heavy equipment roles
- • Opportunities for field service and higher pay with experience
Cons
- • Physically strenuous with risk of strains and injuries
- • High time pressure during planting and harvest seasons
- • Work can be dirty, noisy, and outdoors in bad weather
- • Ongoing learning needed as equipment becomes more computerized
- • May require travel for on-site repairs
Common Questions About the Farm Equipment Service Technician Trade
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