Original title: John Deere owners will get the right to repair their own equipment under a new FTC settlement
Article
John Deere agreed in an FTC settlement to provide owners and independent repair shops with diagnostic and repair tools, ending the practice of relying mainly on authorized dealerships. The settlement, also backed by state attorneys general in Illinois, Arizona, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, addresses antitrust claims that Deere restricted competition by withholding software and parts pathways. It bars dealers from retaliating against customers who choose independent repair and covers Deere’s repair services across agricultural, forestry, landscaping, and construction equipment. The company must also pay $1 million toward enforcement costs and submit to ten years of compliance oversight, with a final order pending before Judge Iain D. Johnston. Deere says it already supported flexible repair options and frames the deal as customer-friendly, while critics note its earlier denial and argue the remedy is mainly practical access rather than structural reform. The settlement follows a separate $99 million class-action payout in April, making this a second major Deere concession in one year.
Commenters largely praised the decision as a meaningful win for farmers and cited broader right-to-repair advocacy, including activists working on electronics repair exemptions. Many argued the $1 million payment is symbolic versus Deere’s scale and called for stronger standards across cars, EVs, and software-intensive devices. Some said the rulebook change matters most because farmers need mechanical autonomy, even if Deere machines may not always require software-led repairs. Other participants doubted the broader legal impact, noting FTC settlements do not automatically set precedent and suggesting regulators may be pursuing a politically visible win. A minority warned that Deere’s locked-down parts and designs still leave competition constrained despite access commitments. Overall, the community treated the outcome as progress but incomplete, with repeated calls to expand rights beyond this single company and sector.