HomeLegal DirectoryFAA Part 107 (drones)

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FAA Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Rule (14 CFR Part 107)

United States · 14 C.F.R. Part 107

The core federal rulebook for commercial and recreational small drones (under 55 lb). Operators need a Remote Pilot Certificate, must keep the drone within visual line of sight, fly below 400 ft, avoid most airspace without authorization, and follow operations-over-people limits. Waivers and Beyond-Visual-Line-of-Sight (BVLOS) approvals exist for advanced operators.

Technical detail

14 C.F.R. Part 107 governs civil small-UAS operations; supplements 49 U.S.C. § 44809 (recreational) and Part 89 (Remote ID). Performance categories 1–4 for operations over people; Part 108 BVLOS framework under FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024 (Pub. L. 118-63) in rulemaking.

Who is protected: The general public, people overflown, and persons whose privacy or safety could be affected by drone operations

Who must comply: Commercial and most recreational small-UAS operators in U.S. airspace

Key facts

JurisdictionUnited States
LevelFederal
StatusIn effect
Protection strengthStronger protection
Effective date2016-08-29
Enacted2016-06-21
Citation14 C.F.R. Part 107
Enforced byFederal Aviation Administration
Private right of actionNo — agency enforcement only
PenaltiesFAA civil penalties up to ~$32,666 per violation; certificate suspension/revocation; criminal referral for endangerment
Topicsconsumer protection · government use of AI · consumer data privacy
Last verified2026-06-17
Official source14 CFR Part 107 — Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (eCFR) ↗

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