John Deere LOSES in Federal Court ā $4.2 BILLION Right to Repair Scandal EXPOSED!
For decades, John Deere has told Americaās farmers they own their land but not their tractors.
Now, in the wake of a federal judgeās rebuke and the Biden administrationās anŃιŃrust crackdown, the company faces a staggering $4.2 billion lawsuit that threatens its stronghold on rural repair.
While the headlines focus on a courtroom battle, the real disaster unfolds in the fields, where crops wither as machines remain broken for weeks.
How did a repair monopoly push generations of farmers off their land, and what happens when everyday farmers take their fight to federal court?
Jared Wilson stands at the edge of his familyās fields, watching the calendar slip by as his fertilizer spreader sits idle at the dealership.

For 28 days, the machine is out of reach, locked behind a service order and awaiting a technician authorized to use John Deereās proprietary software.
As the planting window closes, Wilson feels the pressure mounting.
He has already spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on repairs over the years, but this time, the delay cuts deeper.
Every lost day means fewer acres planted, lost yield, and a shrinking margin that threatens the farm his family has worked for generations.
Wilsonās voice is steady, but his frustration is clear.
āTime absolutely means money in this business,ā he states. āWhen machines fail at critical times, it severely impacts your bottom line.ā

The dealership backlog stretches for weeks, and Wilsonās calls for updates are met with apologies and reminders that only certified technicians can access the tools needed to unlock his equipment.
The season pį“sses, and the damage is done.
Wilson is not alone; across the Midwest, farmers share stories of missed harvests and ruined crops due to repairs bottlenecked through a handful of authorized shops.
For many, the cost is not just measured in dollars but in the future of their farms.
Wilson admits he has considered leaving the business altogether rather than letting a distant corporation decide when and if he can work his own land.
On January 15, 2025, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), joined by the Attorneys General of Illinois and Minnesota, filed a sweeping complaint in federal court against Deere and Company.

The lawsuit did not hold back, accusing Deere of using its exclusive control over diagnostic software to monopolize repair services for large tractors and combines.
The complaint outlined four counts: monopolization under the Sherman Act, unfair compeŃιŃion under the Federal Trade Commission Act, and violations of both Illinois and Minnesota anŃιŃrust laws.
The core allegation was clear: by keeping essential service advisor software in the hands of its dealers, Deere forced farmers to pay more and wait longer for repairs while reaping billions from its parts and service business.
Deereās response was immediate and defiant.
The company labeled the lawsuit baseless, insisting it had provided farmers with ample tools for self-repair and arguing that the FTCās case ignored recent innovations.
Deereās legal team requested the court to dismiss the case, claiming the governmentās į“ssertions lacked substance and that its practices were legal and pro-compeŃιŃive.
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However, on June 9, 2025, Judge Ian D. Johnston rejected Deereās motion for judgment on the pleadings.
In his written opinion, the judge found the governmentās claims plausible enough to warrant a full trial.
He pointed to Deereās ŃĪ¹ŌŠ½Ń grip over which dealers could perform restricted repairs and how much they could charge, highlighting the companyās ability to shape the repair market to its advantage.
With that ruling, the case moved forward, setting the stage for a trial in 2026 that could reshape how farmers maintain the very machines their livelihoods depend on.
At the center of this issue is the Service Advisor software.
This is not merely a tool for reading error codes; it is the only software capable of unlocking, calibrating, and reprogramming the most critical systems on Deereās large tractors and combines.

Only authorized dealers hold the keys, while farmers and independent repair shops are effectively locked out, regardless of their experience or urgency.
When a machine breaks down, even a simple fix can grind to a halt if it requires Service Advisor access.
The software can clear fault codes, pair new electronic control units, and reset security pinsātasks essential for keeping equipment running at full power.
Without it, a tractor can be stuck in limp mode, unable to work a full field.
Independent mechanics have attempted to bridge the gap with aftermarket tools, but these only scratch the surface.
For anything beyond basic diagnostics, the dealerās exclusive access is the final word.

John Deereās licensing policy is strict; full access to Service Advisor is not for sale to equipment owners or local shops.
Access is tied to dealership contracts, proprietary hardware, and annual updates that only authorized locations receive.
This means repairs are no longer a matter of skill or parts on hand but rather of corporate permission.
The lockout is not theoretical; it is coded directly into the machines, dictating who can fix what and when.
Across the corn belt, the numbers tell a story of mounting pressure.
Farmers face repair bills that have climbed year after year, with advocacy groups like the Public Repair Group (PRG) estimating the annual toll from downtime and inflated service costs in the billions.

While John Deereās parts and repair business swells with profit, farmers are forced to make hard choices: wait for a dealer, pay the premium, or risk missing the narrow windows that determine their entire seasonās yield.
The rollout of Operation Center Pro Service was pitched as a breakthrough.
Deere set the subscription at $195 per machine for farmers, while independent shops faced a steep $5,995 per year fee.
However, the reality quickly set in.
Critics argue that the Pro Tool is a shadow of what dealers receive, with key features still locked away.
Advanced calibrations, security resets, and full diagnostic access remain reserved for those in Deereās authorized network.

Senator Elizabeth Warren has publicly called out the company, warning that partial solutions do nothing to address the core problem.
Right to repair advocates echo her frustration, describing the Pro Tool as an impaired workaround designed to blunt public outrage without giving farmers real control.
For many, paying for incomplete access is just another reminder of who truly holds the keys to their equipment and their livelihoods.
On August 8, 2025, the federal court issued a discovery order that sent shockwaves through the agricultural industry.
Judge Ian D. Johnston ruled that John Deere would gain access to confidential business data from its top rivals: AGCO, CNH Industrial, and Kubota.
This information gathered by the FTC during its investigation included sensitive pricing structures, internal financial reports, and detailed sales figures.

For Deereās legal team, this trove offered a rare glimpse into the strategies and margins of its closest compeŃιŃorsāa level of access almost never seen in anŃιŃrust litigation.
AGCO, alarmed by the potential consequences, quickly filed a motion for interlocutory appeal in September 2025, arguing that once these documents were disclosed, the risk of compeŃιŃive misuse could not be undone.
The court rejected the appeal, clearing the way for Deere and the 16 farmer plaintiffs in the class action to review the data.
Industry leaders watched as the lines between legal defense and corporate intelligence blurred, raising urgent questions about how far companies will go to protect their edge and what secrets might surface in the process.
Pressure on John Deere is no longer confined to American courtrooms or farm fields.
In Canada, lawmakers have pį“ssed new laws granting farmers the legal right to bypį“ss digital locks on their equipment for repair purposes.

These measures, granted royal į“ssent by Parliament, ensure that Canadian farmers can access the tools and parts they need, regardless of brand.
The focus extends to interoperability, making it easier for producers to use replacement parts from other manufacturers without fear of legal pushback.
Meanwhile, in Australia, the National Farmers Federation has grown frustrated with years of voluntary talks that delivered few results.
They have turned to the government, calling for binding legislation to guarantee access to diagnostic tools and software.
The ripple effect is felt in the United States as well, as the FTC lawsuit seeks a permanent injunction that would force Deere to open its Service Advisor software to all owners and independent repair shops.

At the state level, lawmakers in more than a dozen states have introduced right to repair bills aimed at agricultural equipment.
The momentum is unmistakable; the era of closed systems and corporate control is facing a global challenge, with policymakers and advocates pushing for a future where repair is a right, not a privilege.
The fight over repair rights isnāt just about machines; itās about who controls the future of farming.
As courts and lawmakers weigh in, the outcome will determine if innovation serves the few or empowers the many.
For Americaās growers, the stakes remain as real and urgent as next seasonās harvest.