HomeLegal DirectoryDrone Remote ID Rule

In effect Moderate protection

FAA Remote Identification of Unmanned Aircraft Rule (14 CFR Part 89)

United States · 14 C.F.R. Part 89; 86 Fed. Reg. 4390 (Jan. 15, 2021)

Most drones flying in U.S. airspace must broadcast a digital 'license plate' — Remote ID — that includes the drone's ID, location, altitude, and the control station's location, so law enforcement and the public can identify drones in the sky.

Technical detail

14 C.F.R. Part 89 requires Standard Remote ID, Remote ID Broadcast Module retrofit, or operation in an FAA-Recognized Identification Area (FRIA). Enforcement began Sept. 16, 2023 after a six-month discretionary extension from the original March 2023 date.

Who is protected: The public, law enforcement, and airspace users seeking accountability for drone operations

Who must comply: Operators of UAS required to register under Part 48; drone manufacturers producing UAS for U.S. sale

Key facts

JurisdictionUnited States
LevelFederal
StatusIn effect
Protection strengthModerate protection
Effective date2023-09-16
Enacted2021-01-15
Citation14 C.F.R. Part 89; 86 Fed. Reg. 4390 (Jan. 15, 2021)
Enforced byFederal Aviation Administration
Private right of actionNo — agency enforcement only
PenaltiesFAA civil penalties; certificate action
TopicsAI disclosure and transparency · government use of AI · police and surveillance AI
Last verified2026-06-17
Official source14 CFR Part 89 — Remote Identification of Unmanned Aircraft (eCFR) ↗

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