Messicks did a video with a 1025R discussing axle weight ratings. He did it through orange colored glasses, but the somewhat scientific approach is colorblind.
I have not looked at this size of tractor so my buying insights are limited
This post is in direct response to the video, not
@Sportsman762 !
Some of you know how I feel about lack of rear ballast for loader work (the rest are about to find out!

) ... I say "Shame in Niel!" Yes, I know ... I read all kinds of reports from new tractor owners, or soon to be tractor owners that there dealer never even suggested having rear weight on the three point to do loader work, Niel is a salesman ... Why isn't he and all the rest advocating and trying to sell a ballast box?
The biggest reason in that video WHY the front axles are OVERLOADED, is he has NO rear ballast!!! He needs to read the owners manual!
Here is a video showing that even filled rear tires, don't count as rear ballast!
Here is a screenshot from that video ...
Some, maybe even most will not agree with me ... But hear me out!
I believe that you should have as much weight on the three point as you want to lift with the loader ... Think about this ... Lots of these SCUT'S & CUT'S are available as as Tractor Loader Backhoe (TLB) ... While it's "possible" to add more weight on the backhoe, there is no factory option available ... So, I say "That's a good starting point of enough weight!"
Let's look at what a manual for a loader tells us . . . Yeah, I know lots of people don't read them ... Note my purple highlighted arrows!
Kubota uses a loader model numbering system to indicate who much it will lift in Kilograms (KG) ... Multiple by 2.2 to roughly get pounds ...
Notice the word "and"?
How much does the backhoe weigh? Yes, it list other rear attachments, that could be used as rear ballast, if your not planning on using the loader to full capacity ...
Notice how all the pictures/drawings show rear ballast?
Look at the lift capacity ...
To the OP ... If they come back ... I say you need to shop around ... They should be within $1000 of each other ... Sometimes you will see Kubota's cheaper than John Deere's, some times it's the other way around ... Different areas of the country have different promotions at different times ...