The John Deere 4020 loader lift capacity is about 3,100 lb with a 148 loader, 3,800 lb with a 158 loader, or 2,400 lb with a 48 loader, measured at full height at the pivot pin.
John Deere 4020 Loader Lift Capacity
| Tractor Model |
John Deere 4020 |
| Machine Type |
Row-crop tractor |
| Compatible Loader Models |
John Deere 48, 148, and 158 loaders |
| John Deere 48 Loader Lift Capacity |
2,400 lb / 1,088 kg at full height at pin |
| John Deere 148 Loader Lift Capacity |
3,100 lb / 1,406 kg at full height at pin |
| John Deere 158 Loader Lift Capacity |
3,800 lb / 1,723 kg at full height at pin |
| 48 Loader Breakout Force |
3,600 lb / 1,632 kg |
| 148 Loader Breakout Force |
4,700 lb / 2,131 kg |
| 158 Loader Breakout Force |
5,000 lb / 2,268 kg |
| 48 Loader Lift Height |
126 in / 320 cm |
| 148 Loader Lift Height |
126 in / 320 cm |
| 158 Loader Lift Height |
156 in / 396 cm |
| Best Real-World Number |
Use less than the pin rating for forks, bales, logs, pallets, and forward loads |
| Hydraulic System |
Closed-center |
| Hydraulic Pressure |
2,250 psi / 155.1 bar |
| SCV Flow |
6 gpm / 22.7 L/min |
| Total Hydraulic Flow |
18 gpm / 68.1 L/min early models |
| Rear 3-Point Lift |
3,790 lb / 1,719 kg |
How Much Can a John Deere 4020 Loader Lift?
The John Deere 4020 can lift about 3,100 lb / 1,406 kg at full height at the pivot pin with a John Deere 148 loader. With the larger John Deere 158 loader, it can lift about 3,800 lb / 1,723 kg at full height at the pivot pin. With the smaller John Deere 48 loader, it can lift about 2,400 lb / 1,088 kg at full height at the pivot pin.
The honest working number is lower than the pin rating when using pallet forks, bale spears, grapples, or long loads. The farther the weight sits forward from the loader pins, the less the tractor can safely lift.
Use the loader’s pin rating as the headline spec, not the guaranteed pallet fork rating. Real loads sit forward, and that cuts usable lift fast.
Quick Loader Specs Overview
2,400 lb48 Loader Lift
3,100 lb148 Loader Lift
3,800 lb158 Loader Lift
5,000 lbMax Breakout
John Deere 48 vs 148 vs 158 Loader Specs
| Loader Model |
Best Published Lift Capacity |
| John Deere 48 Loader |
2,400 lb / 1,088 kg at full height at pin |
| John Deere 148 Loader |
3,100 lb / 1,406 kg at full height at pin |
| John Deere 158 Loader |
3,800 lb / 1,723 kg at full height at pin |
| Best For Lift Capacity |
John Deere 158 loader |
| Best For Height |
John Deere 158 loader |
| Best Lighter Setup |
John Deere 48 or 148 loader |
| Main Difference |
The 158 is taller and stronger, while the 48 and 148 are shorter |
John Deere 48 Loader Specs
| Lift Capacity at Full Height |
2,400 lb / 1,088 kg at pin |
| Breakout Force |
3,600 lb / 1,632 kg |
| Lift Height at Pin |
126 in / 320 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Dumped |
104 in / 264 cm |
| Reach Dumped |
26 in / 66 cm |
| Reach at Ground |
68 in / 172 cm |
| Dump Angle |
39 degrees |
| Rollback Angle at Ground |
9 degrees |
| Loader Weight |
1,220 lb / 553 kg |
| Bucket Widths |
60 or 72 in |
John Deere 148 Loader Specs
| Lift Capacity at Full Height |
3,100 lb / 1,406 kg at pin |
| Breakout Force |
4,700 lb / 2,131 kg |
| Lift Height at Pin |
126 in / 320 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Dumped |
102 in / 259 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Level |
121 in / 307 cm |
| Reach Dumped |
32 in / 81 cm |
| Dump Angle |
38 degrees |
| Rollback Angle |
11 degrees |
| Boom Cylinder Diameter |
2.5 in |
| Bucket Cylinder Diameter |
2.5 in |
| Loader Weight |
1,350 lb / 612 kg |
| Bucket Widths |
60, 72, 84, or 96 in |
| Bucket Capacity |
0.5 to 0.9 cu yd / 0.4 to 0.7 cu m |
John Deere 158 Loader Specs
| Lift Capacity at Full Height |
3,800 lb / 1,723 kg at pin |
| Breakout Force |
5,000 lb / 2,268 kg |
| Lift Height at Pin |
156 in / 396 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Dumped |
132 in / 335 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Level |
151 in / 383 cm |
| Reach Dumped |
32 in / 81 cm |
| Dump Angle |
37 degrees |
| Rollback Angle |
12 degrees |
| Boom Cylinder Diameter |
2.75 in |
| Bucket Cylinder Diameter |
2.5 in |
| Loader Weight |
1,771 lb / 803 kg |
| Bucket Widths |
60, 72, 84, or 96 in |
| Bucket Capacity |
0.5 to 0.9 cu yd / 0.4 to 0.7 cu m |
Loader Capacity Chart
John Deere 4020 Tractor Specs That Affect Loader Performance
| Engine Options |
John Deere 6-cylinder diesel, gasoline, or LP-gas engines depending on model |
| Tested Drawbar Power |
83.79 hp / 62.5 kW |
| Tested PTO Power |
95.83 hp / 71.5 kW |
| Hydraulic Type |
Closed-center |
| Hydraulic Pressure |
2,250 psi / 155.1 bar |
| SCV Flow |
6 gpm / 22.7 L/min |
| Total Hydraulic Flow |
18 gpm / 68.1 L/min early models |
| Rear Hitch |
Category II |
| Rear Lift |
3,790 lb / 1,719 kg |
| Transmission Options |
8-speed Syncro-Range or 8-speed Power Shift |
| Production Years |
1963 to 1972 |
| Weight |
8,225 to 9,560 lb depending on configuration |
Loader vs Rear Lift Capacity
Rear 3-Point Lift
3,790 lb
Real-World Lifting: What a 4020 Loader Can Handle
| Round Bales |
Yes, usually fine with the right spear and rear ballast |
| Large Square Bales |
Possible depending on bale weight, loader model, and ballast |
| Loose Hay / Straw |
Easy work |
| Manure |
Good loader job with proper bucket |
| Gravel |
Yes, but full buckets get heavy fast |
| Wet Clay / Wet Soil |
Use partial buckets; weight adds up fast |
| Pallet Fork Loads |
Useful, but capacity drops because the load sits forward |
| Logs |
Good for many farm logs, but long wet logs can overload the front end |
The 4020 is a strong classic tractor, but it was not designed like a modern dedicated loader tractor. Loader work is useful, but front axle condition, ballast, steering, mounts, and operator care matter a lot.
Best Uses for a John Deere 4020 Loader
- Feeding hay and moving round bales
- Manure handling
- Loading loose material
- Moving dirt, gravel, and farm materials
- Handling pallets carefully with forks
- General farm cleanup
- Snow pushing and snow loading
Not Best For
- High-cycle commercial loader work
- Repeated heavy pallet handling at full reach
- Using the loader as a crane
- Operating without enough rear ballast
- Trying to replace a telehandler, wheel loader, or skid steer
- Abusing the front axle with oversized bucket loads
Ballast and Front Axle Reality
The John Deere 4020 has enough hydraulic power to run a loader well, but ballast and front-end condition matter. A loader puts big stress on the front axle, steering components, tires, mounts, and frame.
Best practical setup: rear wheel weights, fluid ballast, heavy rear implement, or proper rear counterweight when doing serious loader work.
| No Rear Ballast |
Bad idea for heavy loader work |
| Loaded Rear Tires |
Good baseline stability |
| Rear Wheel Weights |
Very useful for loader balance |
| Heavy Rear Implement |
Good counterweight if mounted safely |
| Front Axle Care |
Avoid shock loading, high-speed turns, and oversized loads |
| Older Tractor Reality |
Inspect pivots, bushings, steering, loader mounts, and hydraulic hoses |
48 vs 148 vs 158 Loader: Which Is Better?
| Best For Maximum Lift |
John Deere 158 loader |
| Best For Maximum Height |
John Deere 158 loader |
| Best For Lighter Farm Chores |
John Deere 48 or 148 loader |
| Best For Heavy Hay / Taller Loading |
John Deere 158 loader |
| Main Warning |
The bigger loader adds more front-end stress if the tractor is worn, poorly mounted, or poorly ballasted |
Common Mistakes
- Thinking every John Deere 4020 has the same loader lift capacity
- Ignoring the loader model fitted to the tractor
- Using the pivot-pin rating as the safe pallet fork rating
- Handling heavy loads without rear ballast
- Overloading the front axle with wet dirt, gravel, or logs
- Using a worn-out front end for heavy loader work
- Replacing a wheel loader or telehandler with a farm tractor loader
- Running worn loader pins, loose mounts, or weak hydraulic hoses
Summary
The John Deere 4020 loader lift capacity depends on the loader fitted. With a John Deere 48 loader, it can lift about 2,400 lb at full height at the pivot pin. With a John Deere 148 loader, it can lift about 3,100 lb at full height at the pivot pin. With a John Deere 158 loader, it can lift about 3,800 lb at full height at the pivot pin. The 4020 has closed-center hydraulics, 2,250 psi pressure, 6 gpm SCV flow, 18 gpm total hydraulic flow on early models, and 3,790 lb rear lift capacity. It can be a very useful classic loader tractor, but real-world lift depends on loader model, ballast, front axle condition, attachment type, and load position.