US Trends

where are bad boy tractors made

Bad Boy tractors are primarily manufactured by Kukje Machinery in South Korea, with final assembly historically done at Bad Boy’s headquarters in Batesville, Arkansas, and newer expansion assembly operations being added in the U.S. as the line grows. The brand’s lawn mowers are largely built in Arkansas, but the compact and utility tractors themselves originate from overseas manufacturing partnerships before being finished and branded stateside.

Main manufacturing locations

  • Most Bad Boy tractor components and core manufacturing come from Kukje Machinery facilities in South Korea under an OEM partnership covering key horsepower ranges.
  • These South Korean–built units are then shipped to the United States for completion, branding, and distribution as Bad Boy tractors.

U.S. assembly and headquarters

  • Bad Boy is headquartered in Batesville, Arkansas, where it has long operated major fabrication and assembly plants for its mowers and where it completes final assembly on many tractor models.
  • In addition to Arkansas, Bad Boy announced a tractor assembly plant investment in Monroeville, Alabama, aimed at producing several tractor models domestically each year, expanding its U.S. footprint.

Mowers vs. tractors

  • Bad Boy emphasizes that its zero-turn mowers are engineered and built in Arkansas facilities using American-sourced steel, reflecting its “built in the USA” branding for that product line.
  • Tractors, by contrast, do not carry the same “fully made in USA” claim, because key manufacturing is outsourced to South Korea even though final assembly and quality control occur in the United States.

Recent developments and “latest news”

  • Recent economic development releases highlight Bad Boy’s continued investment in U.S.-based tractor assembly, such as the approximately $10.5 million expansion in Alabama with plans to build thousands of tractors annually.
  • Industry writeups and dealer discussions often note that this mixed model—overseas manufacturing plus U.S. assembly—allows Bad Boy to compete with established tractor brands while still marketing a strong American presence.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.