About

We're building the tools we wished existed.

Zone Forge Technologies makes precision-ag software that earns farmers' trust the old-fashioned way — by showing the math, citing the source, and never asking for blind faith.

Our philosophy

Precision agriculture has been promising more than it delivers for two decades. Hidden algorithms, mismatched soil-test calibrations, prescriptions that won't load on the equipment you actually own. Most of what's wrong is fixable — but only if you start from the principle that the farmer is the expert and the software exists to make their decisions easier, not to replace them.

That principle shapes everything in Zone Forge.


Three things we believe

1

If you can't show the math, you haven't earned trust.

Every recommendation Zone Forge produces is computed from published university research. Every constant has a citation. If you want to reproduce a rate on the back of an envelope, you can.

2

Defaults should be safe. Overrides should be easy.

The default philosophy works for most farmers. But every input is overridable, every rate is editable, every assumption is visible. The farmer is always in control.

3

Software should never lose your data.

When something goes wrong — and at the boundary between systems, it eventually does — your work stays safe locally. You retry, you don't re-do. You print, you don't lose.

Where we are today

Zone Forge is in early access ahead of public launch — and it's well past a core engine. Soil-health grading, source-cited prescriptions, John Deere push, team chat, an AI agronomy assistant, and Agronomist Studio are all live, and the documentation is written alongside the features themselves. We work in public and we're honest about what's done and what's coming.

Shipped

In progress

On the roadmap

If you'd like to influence what gets built next, get in touch. Early access feedback shapes the roadmap.

Built for farmers, by people who've been on the wrong side of bad ag software.

Try Zone Forge on a field. If you're not convinced in five minutes, we want to know why.