Kubota M95S 3-Point Hitch Lift Capacity

Quick answer:

The Kubota M95S has a 3-point hitch lift capacity of 4,630 lb (2,100 kg) at 24 inches behind the link ends. It also lists hitch category Category 2 / Category 1, hydraulic pump flow 17.2 gpm (65.1 L/min), and operating weight 7,628 lb (3,460 kg).

Best rear lift figure4,630 lb (2,100 kg)
Lift at 24 inches4,630 lb (2,100 kg)
Hitch categoryCategory 2 / Category 1
Operating weight7,628 lb (3,460 kg)

Kubota M95S 3-Point Hitch Lift Capacity

Lift capacity at 24 inches behind link ends 4,630 lb (2,100 kg)
Hitch category Category 2 / Category 1
Hitch control type position control
Hydraulic pump flow 17.2 gpm (65.1 L/min)
Operating weight 7,628 lb (3,460 kg)

Rear Lift Capacity Comparison Chart

Best rear lift comparison

This model

4,630 lb

Average

5,000 lb

Low

2,500 lb

High

8,500 lb

Lift at 24 inches comparison

This model

4,630 lb

Average

5,000 lb

Low

2,500 lb

High

8,500 lb

Hydraulic pump flow comparison

This model

17.2 gpm

Average

15 gpm

Low

8 gpm

High

25 gpm

Operating weight comparison

This model

7,628 lb

Average

10,000 lb

Low

6,000 lb

High

16,000 lb

Kubota M95S Hitch and Rear Lift Notes

Rear lift capacity note For the Kubota M95S, 4,630 lb (2,100 kg) is the headline rear-lift capacity captured. This matters for ballast boxes, tillers, blades, mowers and other mounted implements
24-inch lift note The 24-inch lift figure is usually the more useful number because rear implements hang behind the lift arms, not directly on them
Hitch category note The Kubota M95S hitch category is listed as Category 2 / Category 1. This matters because rear implements need to match the tractor’s hitch pin size and geometry
Hitch control note For the Kubota M95S, position control is listed as hitch-control context. Do not size implements from this field; use lift capacity and hitch category first
Hydraulic flow note For hydraulic context, the Kubota M95S is listed at 17.2 gpm (65.1 L/min). Do not confuse pump flow with lift capacity; they answer different questions
Operating weight note Weight matters with rear implements. The Kubota M95S’s captured operating weight is 7,628 lb (3,460 kg), which affects ballast, traction and stability
Rear implement matching Use the Kubota M95S’s hitch capacity as a filter before shopping for hay equipment, larger mower, cultivator, heavy blade, and mounted planter

Kubota M95S 3-Point Hitch FAQ

What is the Kubota M95S 3-point hitch lift capacity?

The Kubota M95S is listed with 4,630 lb (2,100 kg) for lift at 24 inches behind the link ends. That makes it a strong utility tractor, so it is built for heavier rear implements, hay gear, cultivation tools and serious property or farm use.

What does the Kubota M95S 24-inch lift capacity mean?

It means the Kubota M95S is rated to lift 4,630 lb (2,100 kg) with the load measured 24 inches behind the link ends. That is usually closer to real implement use than a hitch-end-only number.

Can the Kubota M95S use any rear implement?

No. Start with the Category 2 / Category 1 hitch category, then check implement weight against the 4,630 lb (2,100 kg) rating at 24 inches behind the link ends.

What rear implements can the Kubota M95S lift?

Use the 4,630 lb (2,100 kg) rating at 24 inches behind the link ends as the first filter for implements such as hay equipment, larger mower, cultivator, heavy blade, and mounted planter. Also check hitch category Category 2 / Category 1 and operating weight 7,628 lb (3,460 kg) before choosing the implement.

Do hydraulic flow and weight matter for the Kubota M95S?

Yes. The Kubota M95S lists hydraulic pump flow of 17.2 gpm (65.1 L/min) and operating weight of 7,628 lb (3,460 kg). Lift capacity says what it can raise; flow and weight help describe hydraulic response and stability.

Official information note

Mistakes do happen. Tractor hitch lift specs can change by year, market, tire setup, ballast, hitch option and measurement point. Please check the operator manual, build sheet and official kubotausa.com website for official information before buying or lifting heavy implements.