Skid Steer Attachments Auction South Dakota

Posted: 04/07/2026


Equipment Auctions South Dakota

Why South Dakota Buyers Are Snapping Up Skid Steer Attachments at Auction

A consistent shift has been underway in South Dakota auctions over the past several auction cycles: Chinese-brand skid steer attachments — once a curiosity in Midwest equipment lots — are now among the most competitively bid categories on K-BID.com. Brands like Raytree, Wolverine, CFG, and AGT are moving in volume at South Dakota auction sites, with real final hammer prices well below comparable new retail pricing.

The appeal is straightforward. South Dakota landowners, farmers, contractors, and small property managers need capable attachments for their skid steers and compact equipment — and the price differential between a Chinese-brand attachment at auction and a name-brand equivalent at a dealer is significant enough to change the math on a lot of buying decisions.

This post covers real South Dakota K-BID auction sale prices for:

  • Raytree forestry mulchers — RT50, RT60, and mini excavator models
  • Wolverine skid steer attachments — pallet forks, grapple buckets, augers, and brush cutters
  • CFG and AGT mini excavators — gas and diesel models, 1.2–2 ton class
  • KJ steel barns and utility buildings
  • Shipping containers — 20’ and 40’ units

These are not estimates or retail comparisons. These are what South Dakota buyers actually paid through competitive online bidding at K-BID auctions.


Raytree Forestry Mulcher Auction Prices in South Dakota

The Raytree forestry mulcher has become one of the most recognizable Chinese-brand attachments appearing in South Dakota K-BID auction lots. Raytree makes skid-steer-mount and excavator-mount mulching heads designed for land clearing, brush management, and timber work — applications with strong demand across South Dakota’s agricultural and rural property landscape.

South Dakota auction prices for Raytree forestry mulchers show meaningful variation by model:

Model / Description South Dakota Auction Sale Range Notes
Raytree Forestry Mulcher (various models) $1,161–$3,800 Broad range across skid steer and excavator mount lots
Raytree RT50 Forestry Mulcher $2,200–$2,800 Mid-size skid steer mulcher; strong South Dakota demand
Raytree RT60 Forestry Mulcher $2,800–$3,800 Larger 60” cutting width; highest South Dakota auction prices in this category
Raytree Mini Excavator Mulcher Attachment $1,161–$1,800 Excavator-mount configuration; entry-level price point in Raytree lots

The RT60 at $2,800–$3,800 is the headline lot in South Dakota Raytree auction data. A comparable 60” forestry mulcher attachment from a name-brand manufacturer — FAE, Fecon, or Seppi — runs $12,000–$25,000 new. The South Dakota auction price for a Raytree RT60 sits at roughly 15–30 cents on the dollar versus that retail benchmark, even before considering the additional savings of buying at auction rather than retail.

The Raytree mini excavator mulcher attachment at $1,161–$1,800 serves South Dakota buyers who run compact excavators rather than skid steers for their land-clearing work. At this price point, the attachment is accessible to small property owners and hobby farmers who would otherwise find mulcher ownership cost-prohibitive.


Wolverine Skid Steer Attachment Prices in South Dakota

Wolverine attachments cover a wide range of skid steer attachment categories — and South Dakota K-BID auction data shows strong buyer interest across the full Wolverine product lineup. From entry-level pallet forks to heavy-duty grapple buckets and brush cutters, Wolverine lots in South Dakota attract competitive bidding across use cases.

Wolverine Attachment South Dakota Auction Sale Range Typical Use
Wolverine Pallet Forks $345–$600 Material handling, farm and warehouse use
Wolverine Auger $600–$900 Post hole drilling, fence installation, utility work
Wolverine Bucket / Grapple Attachments $800–$1,725 Brush and debris clearing, demolition, material moving
Wolverine Skid Steer Brush Cutter $900–$2,250 Vegetation management, right-of-way clearing, pasture work
Wolverine Skid Steer Attachments (various) $345–$2,250 Full range across South Dakota auction lots

Wolverine pallet forks at $345–$600 are among the most accessible skid steer attachments at South Dakota K-BID auctions. For a South Dakota buyer who already owns a skid steer and needs pallet-handling capability, a Wolverine fork set at auction is a straightforward value play — new Wolverine pallet forks retail for $600–$900 depending on capacity and tine length.

The Wolverine brush cutter at $900–$2,250 is the high-value lot in this category. South Dakota’s mix of agricultural land, rural properties, and right-of-way maintenance requirements makes brush cutters a high-demand attachment category — and the auction price range here is well below the $3,500–$7,000 new retail window for comparable skid steer brush cutting heads.


Building a Full Attachment Package at Auction — What South Dakota Buyers Are Spending

One of the distinctive patterns in South Dakota K-BID auction data is how many buyers are assembling full attachment packages across multiple lots — rather than buying a single attachment at retail. The price math supports this approach.

A South Dakota buyer assembling a working skid steer attachment package through K-BID auctions might spend:

Attachment South Dakota Auction Price Estimated New Retail
Wolverine Pallet Forks $345–$600 $600–$900
Wolverine Auger $600–$900 $1,200–$2,000
Wolverine Grapple / Bucket $800–$1,725 $2,000–$4,500
Raytree RT50 Forestry Mulcher $2,200–$2,800 $8,000–$15,000
Full package total (auction) $3,945–$6,025 $11,800–$22,400

The auction savings across a complete package are substantial — South Dakota buyers assembling four attachments through K-BID are consistently spending 30–50 cents on the dollar versus comparable new retail pricing. For a working farm or property management operation, that gap translates directly into capital available for other equipment, maintenance, or operating costs.


CFG and AGT Mini Excavators in South Dakota

Alongside skid steer attachments, South Dakota K-BID auction lots have consistently featured CFG and AGT compact mini excavators — Chinese-brand machines in the 1.2–2 ton class that have found strong buyer acceptance across the Midwest auction market.

Machine South Dakota Auction Sale Range Notes
CFG Mini Excavator (gas, 1.2–2 ton) $1,575–$4,800 Gas-powered compact class; South Dakota entry-level machine
CFG KKTA27 Kubota Diesel $7,800–$9,600 Kubota diesel engine; highest-priced CFG lot in South Dakota data
AGT Mini Excavator (gas) $1,575–$3,200 Comparable gas-powered compact class; competitive with CFG gas lots

The CFG KKTA27 Kubota Diesel at $7,800–$9,600 is the standout lot in this category. As noted in K-BID auction data from Minnesota and other Midwest states, the Kubota diesel engine designation matters: Kubota diesel powerplants are serviceable across the agricultural Midwest, with dealer support, parts availability, and a documented service history format familiar to any equipment mechanic in the region. South Dakota buyers bidding on the CFG KKTA27 get a Chinese-brand excavator body — with the cost savings that implies — paired with an engine that the local shop can work on.

Gas-powered CFG and AGT units at $1,575–$4,800 serve South Dakota buyers who need compact excavation capability for light to medium applications — utility trenching, landscaping, drainage work, and fence installation — without the capital outlay that a name-brand compact excavator requires. For occasional or seasonal use, these machines represent some of the best value in South Dakota K-BID auction inventory.


KJ Steel Barns and Buildings at South Dakota Auctions

KJ brand steel buildings have become a consistent category in South Dakota K-BID auction lots, covering a wide size range from small utility buildings to full-size farm barns. South Dakota buyers are paying real auction prices well below comparable retail building packages — without the delivery lead times that often accompany new steel building orders.

KJ Steel Building South Dakota Auction Sale Range Typical Use
KJ Small Utility Building $500–$1,200 Tool storage, feed storage, small farm outbuilding
KJ 20x30 Steel Barn $2,500–$3,500 Equipment shelter, vehicle storage, mid-size farm building
KJ 30x40 Steel Barn $4,500–$7,800 Full-size farm barn, equipment storage, workshop
KJ Steel Barn (various sizes) $500–$7,800 Full range across South Dakota auction lots

The KJ 30x40 at $4,500–$7,800 is the high-value lot in this category. A comparable 30x40 steel building package from a retail building supplier in South Dakota typically runs $12,000–$22,000 before site preparation, foundation work, and erection costs. Even at the top of the South Dakota auction range, the KJ 30x40 delivers a meaningful discount versus new retail — and the building is available immediately rather than on a 6–12 week manufacturing lead time.

KJ small utility buildings at $500–$1,200 are among the most accessible building lots in South Dakota K-BID auction inventory. For a South Dakota property owner who needs covered storage quickly and without a large capital outlay, a KJ utility building at auction is a practical, immediate solution.


Shipping Containers at South Dakota K-BID Auctions

Shipping containers are a consistent fixture in South Dakota K-BID auctions, with both 20’ and 40’ units appearing in recent lots. South Dakota buyers use containers for on-farm equipment storage, secure tool and supply storage, and as portable structures for remote property and job site applications.

20’ Shipping Container: $2,935–$3,800

Standard 20’ containers in South Dakota lots are the most accessible entry point in this category. At $2,935–$3,800, a 20’ container offers 160 square feet of weatherproof, lockable storage — appropriate for tool storage, seed and chemical storage, and small equipment shelter on South Dakota farm and rural properties.

40’ HC Shipping Container: $5,500–$7,275

The 40’ high-cube container commands a premium in South Dakota auction data, selling at $5,500–$7,275. High-cube containers offer an additional foot of interior height versus standard-height containers, making them practical for storing taller equipment, shelving-based supply storage, and workshop or field office conversion. For South Dakota buyers who need maximum storage volume per dollar, the 40’ HC is the benchmark lot in this category.

20’ and 40’ containers (combined range): $2,935–$7,275

Across all container sizes and configurations in South Dakota K-BID auction data, buyers are spending $2,935–$7,275 — a range that covers accessible utility storage through high-capacity farm and job-site applications. All of these prices reflect competitive online bidding through K-BID’s network of South Dakota auction affiliates.

5 Things to Know Before Bidding on Skid Steer Attachments at Auction

  1. Confirm your skid steer’s universal quick attach compatibility before bidding. Most Chinese-brand skid steer attachments — including Raytree and Wolverine — are built for standard universal quick attach plates. However, some machines use proprietary plates (Bobcat, for example, has both a standard plate and a Bob-Tach system). Verify your machine’s attachment interface before placing a bid on any skid steer attachment lot.
  2. Check your machine’s hydraulic flow rating against the attachment requirements. Forestry mulchers — including Raytree RT50 and RT60 units — are high-flow attachments. They require a skid steer or compact track loader with high-flow hydraulics (typically 25–40 GPM or higher). If your machine only has standard hydraulic flow, a forestry mulcher will underperform or not operate correctly. Review the attachment spec sheet and match it against your machine’s hydraulic output before bidding.
  3. Inspect attachment condition during the preview window. South Dakota K-BID auctions typically include an inspection date before the auction closes. For any attachment over $500 — and especially for forestry mulchers with cutting teeth and hydraulic motors — in-person inspection of wear components, hydraulic fittings, and structural welds is strongly recommended before placing your maximum bid.
  4. Understand that Chinese-brand attachments have limited parts networks in the U.S. Raytree, Wolverine, CFG, and AGT are available in the U.S. market, but their dealer and parts networks are not as developed as name-brand competitors. For consumable wear parts like mulcher teeth and brush cutter blades, source compatible aftermarket parts before you need them — not after a breakdown.
  5. Factor transport and pickup into your total budget. South Dakota K-BID auction pickup windows are typically 3–5 business days after auction close. Forestry mulchers, grapple buckets, and larger attachments require appropriate trailers and load-handling equipment. Have your transport plan ready before bidding — not after you’ve won the lot.

How K-BID South Dakota Auctions Work

K-BID.com is one of the Midwest’s largest online auction platforms, with a network of South Dakota auction affiliates running competitive online auctions throughout the year. Here’s how the process works for buyers interested in South Dakota skid steer attachment and equipment auctions:

  1. Create a free K-BID account. Registration is free. You’ll need a credit card on file to place bids. No card is charged unless you win a lot.
  2. Search for South Dakota lots by category or brand. Filter by state and search by equipment type, attachment category, or brand name. K-BID’s search tools let you browse active South Dakota auctions from K-BID’s network of South Dakota auction affiliates by category — attachments, mini excavators, steel buildings, shipping containers — or by brand name, including Raytree, Wolverine, CFG, and AGT.
  3. Review lot details, photos, and terms carefully. K-BID listings include condition photos, full item descriptions, and auction terms covering buyer’s premiums, payment deadlines, and pickup requirements. Read the full lot description — not just the title — before placing any bid.
  4. Attend the inspection window for high-value lots. Inspection dates, times, and pickup locations are listed in each lot on K-BID.com. For any attachment or equipment lot over $500, in-person inspection before bidding is strongly recommended.
  5. Set your maximum bid using the proxy bidding system. K-BID uses proxy bidding: enter your maximum and the system bids on your behalf up to that ceiling. Most South Dakota K-BID lots close on a staggered rolling schedule — proxy bidding protects you from being outbid while you’re away from the screen.
  6. Complete payment promptly after the auction closes. Payment is typically due within 1–3 business days of auction close. Specific payment terms vary by auction — always confirm the terms for each individual lot before bidding.
  7. Arrange pickup within the specified window. Missing a pickup deadline can result in storage fees or forfeiture of the lot. Arrange transport — including appropriate trailer capacity for heavy attachments — before the auction closes, not after you’ve won.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I buy Raytree forestry mulchers at auction in South Dakota?
K-BID.com is one of the most active online auction platforms for Chinese-brand skid steer attachments in South Dakota. Recent South Dakota auction lots have included Raytree forestry mulchers ranging from $1,161 for mini excavator mount models up to $3,800 for the RT60 skid steer model. Search active South Dakota auctions filtered by the keyword “Raytree” to find current lots available for online bidding.

What do Wolverine skid steer attachments sell for at auction in South Dakota?
Based on real South Dakota K-BID auction data, Wolverine attachments have sold across a wide price range depending on type: pallet forks at $345–$600, augers at $600–$900, grapple and bucket attachments at $800–$1,725, and brush cutters at $900–$2,250. The full range across all Wolverine lots in South Dakota auction data is $345–$2,250. Prices reflect competitive online bidding through K-BID’s network of South Dakota auction affiliates.

What are CFG mini excavators selling for at South Dakota auctions?
South Dakota K-BID auction data shows CFG gas-powered mini excavators (1.2–2 ton class) selling for $1,575–$4,800. The CFG KKTA27 with Kubota diesel engine has sold for $7,800–$9,600 in South Dakota lots — the highest-priced CFG lot in this dataset. The Kubota diesel engine designation is significant for South Dakota buyers: Kubota diesel powerplants have established dealer and service support across the agricultural Midwest. AGT gas-powered mini excavators have sold for $1,575–$3,200 in comparable South Dakota lots.

Are KJ steel barns and buildings available at South Dakota K-BID auctions?
Yes. KJ brand steel buildings have appeared consistently in South Dakota K-BID auction lots. South Dakota auction prices range from $500–$1,200 for small utility buildings, $2,500–$3,500 for KJ 20x30 steel barns, and $4,500–$7,800 for KJ 30x40 steel barns. A comparable 30x40 steel building package from a retail supplier in South Dakota typically runs $12,000–$22,000 before erection and site costs — making the auction price a significant discount versus new retail, with immediate availability versus a typical manufacturing lead time.

What shipping containers are available at South Dakota auctions on K-BID?
Recent South Dakota K-BID auction lots have included 20’ shipping containers at $2,935–$3,800 and 40’ high-cube containers at $5,500–$7,275. Both sizes attract South Dakota buyers using containers for on-farm equipment storage, secure supply storage, and portable field office or workshop conversion. The 40’ HC commands a premium due to the additional interior height versus standard-height units. All South Dakota container auction prices reflect competitive online bidding through K-BID’s network of South Dakota auction affiliates.

Do Chinese-brand skid steer attachments like Raytree and Wolverine hold up for South Dakota farm use?
South Dakota K-BID auction data shows strong, consistent buyer demand for Raytree and Wolverine attachments across multiple auction cycles — which is itself a signal of buyer acceptance in the market. For light-to-medium applications on South Dakota farm properties, hobby farms, and rural land management, Chinese-brand attachments like Raytree and Wolverine offer capable performance at a fraction of the cost of name-brand alternatives. Key considerations: confirm hydraulic flow compatibility for high-flow attachments like forestry mulchers, source consumable wear parts before you need them (mulcher teeth, brush cutter blades), and inspect condition during the preview window for any lot over $500. Used correctly and maintained properly, these attachments deliver strong value for the South Dakota buyers who are bidding on them consistently at K-BID.com.