Skip to main content

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)

See All Stories
FAA drone B4UFLY laanc new administrator Bryan Bedford mosaic bvlos notam

If you fly drones in the United States, there’s one acronym you need to know: FAA. It stands for the Federal Aviation Administration, and it’s the government agency that sets the rules for everything that flies in US airspace — including your drone.

The FAA is the go-to authority for commercial and recreational drone operations. Whether you’re a hobbyist flying in your backyard or a Part 107-certified drone pilot inspecting power lines, you’re operating under the FAA’s umbrella.

Broadly, the FAA is part of the US Department of Transportation and was created in 1958 to regulate all aspects of civil aviation. Its mission is to ensure the safety of the skies. Traditionally, that meant overseeing airports, air traffic control, and aircraft certification. But with the rapid growth of drones, the FAA’s responsibilities have expanded.

Today, the FAA sets safety standards and airspace rules for unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) — the formal term for drones.

The FAA plays a central role in how, where, and when you can fly your drone. Here’s how:

1. Registration: If your drone weighs more than 0.55 pounds (250 grams), it must be registered with the FAA. Hobbyists register once and apply the number to all their drones. Commercial pilots, on the other hand, must register each drone individually.

2. Remote ID: As of 2023, most drones flown in the US must comply with Remote ID rules. Remote ID is like a digital license plate, allowing authorities to identify and track drones in the air. The FAA introduced this rule to enhance airspace awareness and safety.

3. Part 107 Certification: If you plan to fly your drone for business — whether that’s real estate photography, inspections, or anything else that earns money — you need a Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. To get certified, you must pass an FAA knowledge test and follow specific rules for commercial operations, like flying below 400 feet and staying within visual line of sight.

4. Airspace Authorizations: The FAA controls US airspace, so if you want to fly near airports or in controlled airspace, you need authorization, even for recreational flights. Luckily, tools like LAANC (Low Altitude Authorization and Notification Capability) make it easier to get near-instant approvals for many areas.

5. Safety and Enforcement: The FAA investigates drone accidents and enforces rules. Flying recklessly, near emergency operations, or over crowds can result in warnings, fines, or even criminal charges.

As drone technology advances, the FAA is evolving too. It’s currently exploring rules for beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) flights, drone delivery, and UAS traffic management (UTM) systems. These developments could unlock huge potential — but they’ll come with new regulations.

For drone pilots, staying informed about FAA rules isn’t optional — it’s essential. Whether you’re shooting aerial video or flying for fun, the FAA is the agency that keeps the skies safe — and determines what’s possible for drone operations in the US.

Joby says its air taxi is 84% through FAA Stage Three certification

Joby FAA air taxi

Air taxi developer Joby has offered a few reminders of why it has gained the reputation for being among (if not the) leading advanced air mobility (AAM) companies with an update to investors revealing it had completed 84% of its Stage Three certification work with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

Expand Expanding Close

FAA approves new variant of Matternet M2 delivery drone

Matternet M2 delivery drone faa certified

Matternet, the first non-military drone maker to achieve standard Type Certification and Production Certification by the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), has announced a significant development. The company has built a new, more efficient variant of its M2 delivery drone and it has managed to get an FAA Type Certificate approval for that as well.

Expand Expanding Close

Flytrex to use new FAA BVLOS approval to scale US-wide drone delivery activity

FAA BVLOS Flytrex drone

Aerial food delivery specialist Flytrex has announced authorization from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) permitting it to perform beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) drone flights in markets across the US, an exemption to operate above homes and people without ground observers it plans to use in accelerated scaling of its activities.

Expand Expanding Close

US Air Force and FAA to work together on AAM aircraft integration

FAA Air Force AAM

Responding to political criticism and even some concern within the next generation aviation sector, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has said it will team up with the US Air Force to study the operation and effective integration of advanced air mobility (AAM) aircraft into the nation’s airspace.

Expand Expanding Close

Senate approves AAM, airline exec Michael Whitaker as FAA chief

FAA AAM

The US Senate has confirmed aviation veteran Michael G. Whitaker to lead the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) at the time when the nation’s system for managing traditional aircraft shows signs of serious strain, and the agency struggles to integrate nearing advanced air mobility (AAM) services like air taxis into the national airspace.

Expand Expanding Close

FAA conditionally approves first vertiport for air taxi, AAM testing

air taxi aam vertiport

With the anticipated start of air taxi services in the US set for 2025, it’s not exactly premature for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to have issued its first approval of a vertiport – a conditional greenlight that nevertheless permits development and research of nearing advanced air mobility (AAM) activity.

Expand Expanding Close

Zipline earns FAA BVLOS exemption crucial to unlocking full drone-delivery potential

Zipline drone delivery NHS 1 million milestone

Leading global instant logistics company Zipline has passed another major milestone in its operational evolution – and in the future scaling of the entire drone delivery sector – by obtaining authorization from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to operate beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) flights.

Expand Expanding Close

Flytrex adds Automated Pickup system to speed drone delivery

Flytrex drone delivery

Drone delivery startup Flytrex has announced an upgrade of the method it uses to upload food orders destined for customer households, as part of an effort to reduce processing and transport time and permit the company to continue expanding its aerial business activity.

Expand Expanding Close

Drone Remote ID enforcement delay is ‘discretionary’: What does that mean?

dji mavic 3 enterprise drone remote id firmware update faa delay c2 class label security audit malaysia spy case italy price fixing

The FAA on Wednesday announced it was pushing back the compliance deadline for its drone Remote ID rule by six months, to March 16, 2024. Does that mean the agency is giving a free pass to pilots or that all apparent noncompliance in the meantime will be ignored? Not really. Here’s what is happening…

Expand Expanding Close
The Buzz Podcast Featured Image

The Buzz Podcast: Is Remote ID coming September 16?

This week Yifei and Seth discuss the current unknown status of FAA’s Remote ID rollout. What are our concerns with the current data sharing policy and what changes we think the FAA should make for Remote ID to be safer for all drone pilots to use.

Enjoy the podcast? Shop DJI, Autel, or other drones at Amazon to support The Buzz!

Expand Expanding Close

FAA grants Airobotics drone type certification, UPS Flight Forward and Avionix BVLOS exemptions

FAA drone Aerobatics

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced a trio of significant decisions late Wednesday, including issuance of type certification to Ondas Holding unit Airobotics’ Optimus-1EX automated drone platform, in what’s being touted as the “first non-air carrier drone designed for autonomous security and data capture.” 

Expand Expanding Close

Sustainable Skylines to revolutionize banner ad towing with FAA OK to use drones

Sustainable Skylines drone advertising mitsubishi miami

In a case of disruptive technology promising transformative disruption of disrupting business practices, Florida drone company Sustainable Skylines says it will transform what many beachgoers consider the annoying activity of aerial banner advertising – and, somehow, make it better.

Expand Expanding Close

191-pound drone gets nationwide exemption from FAA to fly BVLOS

phoenix air unmanned bvlos drones faa inspection

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has authorized Phoenix Air Unmanned to operate a Swiss-made drone weighing up to 191.8 pounds beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) for certain types of aerial works. This is the first time a drone of this size has received an exemption for commercial BVLOS operations by the FAA.

Expand Expanding Close

Red Cat Teal 2 drone tech achieve FAA remote ID approval – and then some

Red Cat Teal drones

With enforcement of new Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) rules imposing UAV identification less than a month away, Red Cat Holdings says its Teal 2 defense and security drones have obtained certification as remote ID compliant with an onboard communications system that surpasses minimal requirements.

Expand Expanding Close

NCDOT wins second FAA BVLOS remote drone inspection waiver

NCDOT FAA BVLOS drone

The North Carolina Department of Transport (NCDOT) has earned its second Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) waiver to operate routine drone inspection missions in beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) mode, and will use that with craft from docked stations it plans to deploy near construction sites around the state.

Expand Expanding Close

In a first, FAA rescinds DJI drone’s Remote ID compliance status

dji mavic pro platinum drone service support suspension date end remote id faa rescind status

Last year, DJI became the first drone manufacturer in the world to submit and earn US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) approval for Remote ID protocol compliance. At the time, as many as seven of its popular drone models secured the FAA nod for adequate compliance with the Remote ID rule. Today, that list is much longer. But now, in another first, DJI has also become the only drone maker to have a previously-approved compliance status rescinded by the FAA.

Expand Expanding Close

FAA-AUVSI host paired drone and AAM forums in August

FAA drones AAM

In an effort to fly two major event kites from the same string – and encourage comingling of aerial activities at their heart – the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and Association for Uncrewed Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) are pairing up to host twinned drone and advanced air mobility (AAM) conferences next month at the same time and venue.

Expand Expanding Close

Lilium adds FAA eVTOL basis of certification approval to earlier EU air taxi spec authorization

Lilium air taxi eVTOL

German electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) manufacturer Lilium announced it has received approval from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for its proposed basis of air taxi certification, making it what the company says is the first power-lift aircraft developer to obtain that all-clear by both US and European Union regulators.

Expand Expanding Close

Air taxi maker Archer hires FAA top official Billy Nolen as its eVTOL safety chief

Archer FAA eVTOL taxi

Archer Aviation, one of the companies driving the nearing launch of air taxi services, has announced its hiring of former top Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) official Billy Nolen to oversee safety operations in the continued development of its electric vertical takeoff and landing plane (eVTOL).

Expand Expanding Close