Work gloves and a field logbook with a pen on a truck tailgate at dawn

Pesticide application records, kept straight

This guide is about workflow, not rules. Requirements come from the product label, federal law, and your state — official sources are linked below.

Every licensed applicator knows the two truths of application records: you're required to keep them, and the version scribbled from memory at the end of the week is the version that fails you. The fix isn't more discipline — it's a system where the record is created at the stop, in the same motion as the work.

Capture these fields at every application

Exact requirements depend on your state and license class, but a record that captures the following covers what most frameworks ask for and — more importantly — will reconstruct any visit years later:

Your state may require more — and restricted-use products carry their own federal record rules. Verify against the official sources below.

The system: record while the tank is out

Where the official rules live

Where Pest Route fits

Pest Route's On Site screen puts the materials-and-chemicals log inside the service stop itself — captured with the photos, the timer, and the signature, stored with the visit, searchable later. It records exactly what you enter and what verified product lookups return; the compliance judgment stays where the license is — with you.

On Site capture screen where photos, materials, and application details are recorded during the service visit
Current TestFlight build, sample data.

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FAQ

Is paper still acceptable?

Generally yes — most frameworks care that records are complete, timely, and retrievable, not what they're written on. Paper's weakness isn't legality; it's retrieval, backup, and the gap between the truck and the filing cabinet.

How long do application records need to be kept?

It varies by state and license class, and federally-covered restricted-use records carry their own retention period — USDA's program (linked above) states the federal rule. The safe operating posture: check your state's current requirement, and let digital storage make long retention free.

What's the most common record-keeping failure?

Timing. Records reconstructed at week's end drift — amounts get rounded, sites get generalized, one stop blurs into another. A shorter record made during the application beats a longer one made from memory.

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