Skid Loader vs Tractor

EastTX

New member
Aug 9, 2025
1
0
1
East Texas
Hello everyone. I'm looking at replacing my current tractor (LS XR4145) with a new Kubota, likely an M4 or M7060. I need something more reliable but I really need to step up in HP. 45hp and 38 to the PTO doesn't cut it (literally) when my pasture is tall and wet in spring, hence the M4 or 7060. However a friend and my son both suggested I consider a skid steer instead. I have 30 acres, mow about 18 of that two to three times a year (less when my hay guy actually shows up) and have a half mile long gravel drive that I maintain. If I had to put a percentage on my usage it would be 50% driveway maintenance, 25% mowing/brush hogging and 25% grapple work (with some occasional dirt/gravel work). I use the grapple for moving all kinds of stuff and for tree removal/clearing and keeping the trails clean in my 10 acres of heavy woods. I love working with a skid loader, I'm just not sure it's the best all around tool for my place. I know skid loaders are great for clearing land, but has anyone here used a skid loader to mow a pasture and occasionally do some brush hog work? Most importantly, used one with a land leveler/grader to maintain a driveway? Appreciate your input.
 

Shawn T. W

Well-known member

Equipment
'05 L5030 HSTC - '21 MF GC 1725 MB - '18 JD Z960M Z-Trak
Dec 9, 2024
214
334
63
SW Missouri Ozarks
A skid steer will be slow on the driveway, and Slow & BUMPY in the brush hog area if it's not smooth ... A tracked one might be slightly better, but you will be shook to death by the time you get done mowing that much ... For grapple work, the Skid Steer wins ...
 

NCL4701

Well-known member

Equipment
L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
3,070
4,897
113
Central Piedmont, NC
Personally, I would not want to routinely mow any significant acreage with a skid steer, tracked or wheel. Yeah, they’re good at clearing with a heavy bush hog. Mowing an already cleared area, they tear up the ground, are slow, and translate every bump and hole to your tail bone. I’d go with the tractor option. YMMV.

Sounds like you have experience running both skid steer and tractor. You know your uses and needs better than your friends and family. If you think about it, you probably know better what you need than anyone else (even some random dude on the internet). No one understands your needs better than you.

I got a setup for my place that was, if not ideal, dang close to ideal. I solicited a lot of opinions and if I’d gone with them, I would have gotten an undersized, under featured tractor with insufficient attachments. Or a CTL one of my friends was lobbying hard for, in hindsight I think because he wanted to borrow it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users

whatsupdoc

Active member

Equipment
L3302
Jul 9, 2024
106
114
43
USA
For the driveway , clearing land and grapple work the skid steer.
For mowing the tractor would work best.

I dont know what kind of grass you have there where a 45Hp
tractor cant cut it. Maybe there is a problem with your cutter.
 

jimh406

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
Kubota L2501 with R4 tires
Jan 29, 2021
2,570
2,026
113
Western MT
I'm not a skid steer expert, but from what I understand, the advantage is on lift capacity and flow rate for front mount implements.

Those don't seem like a big deal for the size of tractor you are considering. Tractors have the capability of running a wide bat wing mower and basically any other implement like a grader/scraper. I'd go that route.

Fwiw, my relatively little L2501HST does what I need to do. The models you are considering should be great.
 

NorthwoodsLife

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
Kubota B7100(sold), Kubota LX2610 Cab
Oct 15, 2021
1,253
1,244
113
Wisconsin
Get a big ol' M series.

Then pave your driveway for less than the cost of a track loader and forget about it.

But.... Who doesn't want a track loader? You could do your grapple and loader work 10x faster. 360 spin and fast. Huge hydraulic capability....

Unless you are mostly working on pavement, a track loader is what you want. Not a skid steer.

Very different animals. Since the OP had operated both he/ she would know that.

The lift and breakout capacity in the loader and hydro needs of other implements is hands down better in skid steer. Not to mention the 360 spin, speed at loader work, and working footprint.

Mowing large acreage is utility tractor work.

Unless you are working on pavement most of the time, track loader is the way to go on a skidder.

1000009074.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 user