Ask Runable forDesign-Driven General AI AgentTry Runable For Free
Runable
Back to Blog
Technology7 min read

John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair | WIRED

The tractor maker is paying for its years as the central opponent of right-to-repair. Consumer advocates say it’s still not enough. Discover insights about john

governmentregulationpolicyagriculturelaws+3 more
John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair | WIRED
Listen to Article
0:00
0:00
0:00

John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair | WIRED

Overview

John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair

On Monday, farming equipment manufacturer John Deere announced it would pay $99 million in a settlement to a class action lawsuit brought on by its customers. The suit accused the company of restricting access to tools and repairs of its tractors and other farming equipment, effectively leveraging a monopoly on the repair market for its products.

Details

The money, if accepted by the farmer-aligned plaintiffs, will go into a fund, then eventually be distributed to Deere equipment owners who can prove they paid for dealership repairs sometime since 2018. In the settlement, John Deere also says it will make repair tools and services more widely available. For the next 10 years, at least.

John Deere has kept tight control over how its customers can fix or tinker with its equipment by disallowing access via software restrictions or requiring machines to be brought to approved shops for repair. That has left thousands of farmers to deal with delayed harvests and millions of dollars in lost profits while waiting for an approved fix.

The difficulty in repairing John Deere equipment has become something of a catalyst for the broader right-to-repair movement—people who advocate for the ability to fix their own products after they have purchased them. To push back against the company, farmers have hacked tractors to get around software restrictions. Local laws have been drafted in farming-heavy states like Iowa to give power back to equipment owners. Advocates have filed many similar lawsuits against the company, including a suit filed in January 2025 by the US Federal Trade Commission. Repair advocacy has been booming, and John Deere is often right in the crosshairs.

“Right-to-repair is almost a misnomer,” says Ethan E. Litwin, an antitrust lawyer at Shinder Cantor Lerner law firm. “This is the fight about ownership rights. What the farmers alleged is that John Deere changed the rules on them once they purchased their tractors and other farming equipment. How can a manufacturer legitimately claim to restrain those rights post-sale?”

Litwin also noted the settlement amount of

99million,ratherthananeven99 million, rather than an even
100 million. It’s like when a company charges
9.99foraproductratherthan9.99 for a product rather than
10, to make it feel like it’s less expensive than it is.

“Clearly that was the maximum that Deere was willing to go because they didn't want to have a nine-figure number in the press release,” Litwin says, comparing the number to similar settlement cases he has seen. “There’s a big PR difference.”

In its settlement, Deere admitted no wrongdoing. By definition, a settlement is bound to be less money than the damages the company is being accused of and the legal costs it would absorb by fighting the case. But repair advocates estimate the losses by John Deere customers as a result of the company's repair restrictions are somewhere in the realm of

4.2billion.Inthelawsuit,antitrusteconomistRussellLambestimatedthatoverchargingforequipmentrepairshadcostfarmersbetween4.2 billion. In the lawsuit, antitrust economist Russell Lamb estimated that overcharging for equipment repairs had cost farmers between
190 million and $387 million alone. Deere’s payout winds up being a fraction of those estimated damages, split up between an estimated 200,000 farmers who are likely to be included in the class action dole-out of funds.

“The farmers who get restitution will get some chunk of change, but that's not the thing they care about,” says Nathan Proctor, head of the right-to-repair campaign at consumer advocacy organization US PIRG. “They're not looking for five grand or something like that in the mail. They’re looking for the ability to fix their equipment, because if they can't fix it, they can lose everything.”

Assuming John Deere does what it says and makes its repair tools and equipment more available, there are also bound to be some economic effects on the company as well.

“The true value of the non-monetary relief in this case, I would say, is unknown, but could be very substantial,” Litwin says. “Deere is potentially sacrificing hundreds of millions in profits.”

When asked for comment, a John Deere representative did not address the lawsuit directly, but sent a statement attributed to the company’s vice president of global aftermarket and customer support, Denver Caldwell. That statement said, “John Deere is aligned with farmers when it comes to repair. We want farmers to be able to fix their equipment. In fact, our industry depends on it.”

The company also pointed to its Operations Center Pro Service, software that customers can use for diagnosis, repairs, and reprogramming. “This access is not theoretical,” said the statement. “It is being used right now by many farmers across the US and Canada.”

Repair advocates aren't convinced. They say the company has made commitments to repair efforts in the past, but undercut them from taking effect in meaningful ways.

“John Deere has a terrible track record of saying one thing and then doing something that is not fully as good as they said that they were going to do,” Litwin says.

“They've earned the skepticism,” Proctor says. “We've done this dance before.”

John Deere is not finished with its repair lawsuits. In 2025, the company was sued by the US Federal Trade Commission over similar repair concerns. Even if Deere does make good on its promises to make repair tools and equipment readily available, the settlement states that the promise is only good for 10 years. After that, Deere could simply choose to change how it manages repair access.

“I intend to be on the case for this until I'm convinced this problem is solved,” Proctor says.

“We're not going to stop advocating for farmers until their equipment belongs to them and does what they want it to, and is not beholden to whatever John Deere deems as an interest to shareholders.”

In your inbox: Will Knight's AI Lab explores advances in AI

In your inbox: Will Knight's AI Lab explores advances in AI

Unmasking the paramilitary agents behind Trump’s immigration crackdown

Unmasking the paramilitary agents behind Trump’s immigration crackdown

Big Story: Opposing ICE might save the country—or ruin your life

Big Story: Opposing ICE might save the country—or ruin your life

WIRED@Night: Hear Andy Greenberg discuss the facts and fiction of crypto

WIRED@Night: Hear Andy Greenberg discuss the facts and fiction of crypto

Samsung Gs 25+ Free With T-mobile for Business Supermobile

Squarespace Promo Code: 20% Off Annual Acuity Subscriptions

Key Takeaways

  • John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair

  • On Monday, farming equipment manufacturer John Deere announced it would pay $99 million in a settlement to a class action lawsuit brought on by its customers

  • The money, if accepted by the farmer-aligned plaintiffs, will go into a fund, then eventually be distributed to Deere equipment owners who can prove they paid for dealership repairs sometime since 2018

  • John Deere has kept tight control over how its customers can fix or tinker with its equipment by disallowing access via software restrictions or requiring machines to be brought to approved shops for repair

  • The difficulty in repairing John Deere equipment has become something of a catalyst for the broader right-to-repair movement—people who advocate for the ability to fix their own products after they have purchased them

Cut Costs with Runable

Cost savings are based on average monthly price per user for each app.

Which apps do you use?

Apps to replace

ChatGPTChatGPT
$20 / month
LovableLovable
$25 / month
Gamma AIGamma AI
$25 / month
HiggsFieldHiggsField
$49 / month
Leonardo AILeonardo AI
$12 / month
TOTAL$131 / month

Runable price = $9 / month

Saves $122 / month

Runable can save upto $1464 per year compared to the non-enterprise price of your apps.