Kubota Skid Steer Snow Pusher🔵 Mid
✓ No hydraulics required
✓ Fits most skid steers, including small-frame
View on kubota.ca →
Overview
Kubota's skid steer snow pusher is a box-containment plow for SSV and SVL series machines doing commercial Canadian snow removal. The containment design moves large snow volumes efficiently on parking lots and loading docks. Kubota dealers are found across Canada for service.
Canada Availability
Available through Kubota dealers across Canada.
Key Facts
- Brand: Kubota Tractor Corporation
- Type: snow pusher / containment plow
- Design: box containment
- Mount: Kubota quick attach (SSQA compatible)
- Application: commercial parking lot snow removal
- Typical weight: 650 lbs
- Hydraulic flow: none required — passive attachment, no auxiliary hydraulics
✅ Specs sourced from kubota.ca · Last verified: March 2026
Is This Right For You?
✅ Buy if…
- You push snow on flat commercial lots, parking decks, or loading docks with a defined push perimeter
- You don't have room or budget for a blower — pushers cost far less and maintain well
⛔ Skip if…
- Your site has no windrow drop zone — pushers pile snow that has to go somewhere
- Wet, heavy Ontario snow is your primary challenge — heavy packs reduce machine traction with a full pusher
🔍 Also consider…
- Sectional pusher if your site has frost heaves or uneven pavement you need the wings to follow
- Snow blower attachment if bank height from repeated pushes is becoming a problem
🔧 Machine Compatibility
Designed for Kubota machines but mounts to any skid steer or CTL with a universal SSQA quick-attach plate.
About Kubota in Canada
Kubota attachments are available through the Kubota dealer network across Canada, which covers most provinces. If you run Kubota compact equipment, same-brand attachments provide the best hydraulic compatibility and your local dealer handles both machine and attachment support under one roof.
Care & Maintenance
- Inspect the trip-edge blade for wear before each season and replace when worn below the wear indicator line — a worn-through trip-edge transfers full impact to the blade frame
- Grease all trip-edge pivot and hinge points after every major pushing session, especially after work in extreme cold where grease migrates out of joints faster
- Check side board welds for cracking after frost heave strikes — box sides bear significant impact forces during high-speed frost heave hits
- Rinse salt off after every use and before extended storage — road salt accelerates rust on unpainted steel edges and frame members faster than people expect
- Store off the ground on blocks or a pallet to prevent the cutting edge from sitting in standing water and rusting from below
How to Connect
- Back machine into push frame receiver
- Lower boom to slide trip edges into receiver arms
- Engage mounting pins or latch
- Raise slightly off ground and test trip edge reset manually if accessible
⚠ Safety NoteSnow pushers are passive (no hydraulics) on most models — mounting is mechanical only
❄️ Before You Buy a Snow Pusher
Snow pusher sizing is machine-dependent — an oversized box overloads your loader arms; undersizing means extra passes on large lots.
- Match pusher width to your machine's ROC and tipping load Attachment sizing guide →
- Trip-edge vs sectional edge — trip edge for paved lots, sectional for uneven surfaces Snow pusher guide →
- Buy before November — Canadian dealers sell out of popular sizes by mid-winter
Find a Snow Pusher Dealer →
Complete the job — you might also need:
✅ Last checked: March 2026
Source: skidsteerattachments.ca/catalog/snow-pushers/kubota-snow-pusher/