The John Deere 870 loader lift capacity is 920 lb at full height at the pivot pin with the John Deere 80 or 440 loader.
John Deere 870 Loader Lift Capacity
| Tractor Model | John Deere 870 |
| Machine Type | Compact utility tractor |
| Common Loader Models | John Deere 80 loader and John Deere 440 loader |
| 80 Loader Lift Capacity | 920 lb / 417 kg at full height at pin |
| 440 Loader Lift Capacity | 920 lb / 417 kg at full height at pin |
| Breakout Force | 1,790 lb / 811 kg |
| Bucket Breakout Force | 2,065 lb / 936 kg |
| Maximum Lift Height at Pin | 93.7 in / 237 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Dumped | 75.6 in / 192 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Level | 87.2 in / 221 cm with 440 loader |
| Reach Dumped | 23.6 in / 59 cm |
| Reach at Ground | 53 in / 134 cm |
| Dump Angle | 39 degrees |
| Rollback Angle at Ground | 22 degrees |
| Best Real-World Number | Use less than 920 lb for forks, logs, pallets, bales, and forward loads |
How Much Can a John Deere 870 Loader Lift?
The John Deere 870 can lift 920 lb / 417 kg at full height at the pivot pin with either the John Deere 80 loader or the John Deere 440 loader.
The loader also has 1,790 lb / 811 kg breakout force and 2,065 lb / 936 kg bucket breakout force. That gives it decent digging and curl strength for a compact tractor, but the full-height lift number is still modest.
Use 920 lb as the pivot-pin rating, not the pallet fork rating. Forks, logs, pallets, grapples, and bales move the load forward, so safe usable lift is lower.
Quick Loader Specs Overview
920 lbLift at Pin
1,790 lbBreakout Force
2,065 lbBucket Breakout
93.7 inLift Height
John Deere 80 vs 440 Loader Specs
| Loader Model | Best Published Lift Capacity |
| John Deere 80 Loader | 920 lb / 417 kg at full height at pin |
| John Deere 440 Loader | 920 lb / 417 kg at full height at pin |
| Main Difference | The 440 listing includes more bucket width options and level clearance data |
| Best Real-World Limit | Less than 920 lb when the load sits forward from the pins |
| Best Use | Light property work, mulch, loose soil, firewood, small logs, and light material handling |
John Deere 80 Loader Specs
| Lift Capacity at Full Height | 920 lb / 417 kg at pin |
| Breakout Force | 1,790 lb / 811 kg |
| Bucket Breakout Force | 2,065 lb / 936 kg |
| Maximum Lift Height at Pin | 93.7 in / 237 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Dumped | 75.6 in / 192 cm |
| Reach Dumped | 23.6 in / 59 cm |
| Reach at Ground | 53 in / 134 cm |
| Dump Angle | 39 degrees |
| Rollback Angle at Ground | 22 degrees |
| Raise Time | 3.0 seconds |
| Dump Time | 3.3 seconds |
| Lower Time | 1.8 seconds |
| Rollback Time | 2.0 seconds |
| Bucket Width | 53 in / 134 cm |
John Deere 440 Loader Specs
| Lift Capacity at Full Height | 920 lb / 417 kg at pin |
| Breakout Force | 1,790 lb / 811 kg |
| Bucket Breakout Force | 2,065 lb / 936 kg |
| Maximum Lift Height at Pin | 93.7 in / 237 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Dumped | 75.6 in / 192 cm |
| Clearance with Bucket Level | 87.2 in / 221 cm |
| Reach Dumped | 23.6 in / 59 cm |
| Reach at Ground | 53 in / 134 cm |
| Dump Angle | 39 degrees |
| Rollback Angle at Ground | 22 degrees |
| Bucket Widths | 53, 60, or 73 in |
Loader Capacity Chart
John Deere 870 Tractor Specs That Affect Loader Performance
| Engine | Yanmar 1.4L 3-cylinder diesel |
| Engine Power | 28 hp / 20.9 kW net |
| PTO Power | 25 hp / 18.6 kW claimed |
| Drive | 2WD or 4WD |
| Transmission | 9-speed unsynchronized gear or 9-speed partially synchronized |
| Hydraulic Type | Open center |
| Hydraulic Capacity | 5.5 gal / 20.8 L |
| Hydraulic Pressure | 2,250 psi / 155.1 bar |
| Hydraulic Pump Flow | 8.1 gpm / 30.7 L/min |
| Total Flow – Manual Steering | 8.1 gpm / 30.7 L/min |
| Total Flow – Power Steering | 12.4 gpm / 46.9 L/min |
| Steering Flow | 4.3 gpm / 16.3 L/min |
| Rear Hitch | Category I |
| Rear Lift at 24 in | 1,880 lb / 852 kg |
| Weight | 2,515 to 2,670 lb depending on setup |
Loader vs Rear Lift Capacity
Real-World Lifting: What a John Deere 870 Can Handle
| Mulch Bucket | Easy normal use |
| Loose Topsoil | Good, but wet soil gets heavy fast |
| Gravel Bucket | Partial buckets only; full buckets can overload the loader |
| Firewood | Good for small to medium property loads |
| Small Logs | Useful within limits and with rear ballast |
| Pallet Forks | Light loads only; forward weight reduces usable lift |
| Round Bales | Not a good regular job for this size tractor |
| Snow Removal | Good compact tractor use with bucket or blade |
The John Deere 870 is useful, but it is not a skid steer. The 920 lb loader rating is at the pin, and real fork/grapple loads will be lower.
Best Uses for a John Deere 870 Loader
- Moving mulch, compost, loose dirt, and garden material
- Light driveway and gravel work
- Firewood and small log handling
- Small acreage cleanup
- Snow removal with bucket or blade
- Light pallet fork work with proper ballast
- General property maintenance
Not Best For
- Heavy pallet lifting at full reach
- Round bale handling
- Full buckets of wet gravel or wet clay
- Using the loader as a crane
- Commercial loader work
- Replacing a skid steer, telehandler, or larger utility tractor
- Loader work without rear ballast
Ballast: The Part People Ignore
The John Deere 870 needs rear ballast for safe loader work. Without enough rear weight, the tractor can lose traction, steering control, and stability.
Best practical setup: loaded rear tires plus a ballast box, box blade, rear implement, or proper 3-point counterweight when doing loader work.
| No Rear Ballast | Bad idea for loader work |
| Loaded Rear Tires | Good baseline stability |
| Ballast Box | Best simple counterweight option |
| Box Blade | Useful if heavy enough |
| Pallet Fork Work | Needs extra care because the load sits farther forward |
| Older Tractor Reality | Inspect front axle, steering, loader pins, mounts, hoses, and hydraulic leaks |
Common Mistakes
- Using the 920 lb pin rating as the pallet fork rating
- Ignoring how far forward the load sits
- Lifting heavy loads without rear ballast
- Driving with the loader raised high
- Trying to lift full buckets of wet gravel or wet clay
- Forgetting that bucket, forks, spear, or grapple weight reduces usable payload
- Running worn loader pins, loose mounts, weak hoses, or tired hydraulics
- Assuming the loader can lift the same amount at full reach as it can near the pins







