Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE VII— - AVIATION PROGRAMS › Part PART A— - AIR COMMERCE AND SAFETY › Subpart subpart iii— - safety › Chapter CHAPTER 448— - UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS › § 44803
The FAA must run and update a program for unmanned aircraft system (UAS) test ranges. The program lets people and groups do testing, development, and evaluation of UAS and related tech. It must also help, as long as it is safe and efficient, to bring drones into the national airspace. The program includes the 7 test ranges already established and any others set up under prior laws. The FAA may pick up to 2 more ranges by competition, but no more than 9 ranges can be in the program at one time. Any newly chosen range must be a public entity (like a state, local, Tribal, or territorial agency), be approved by the chief executive of its area before designation, carry out innovative testing that helps safety and the U.S. aviation industry, and meet other FAA requirements. The FAA can set aside restricted or special use airspace for ranges and may ask the sponsor for a draft environmental review under the National Environmental Policy Act. The FAA can approve who gets to use a range and may write standards and traffic rules for range flights. The FAA will work with NASA and other agencies, handle civil and public flights, verify safety, require data sharing, allow outside funding, and use modeling and simulation. Range testing can cover things like sense-and-avoid, communications and navigation, beyond-visual-line-of-sight and autonomous operations, nighttime and over-people flights, multiple UAS by one operator, traffic management, privacy improvements, and approved counter-UAS work. The normal rules in section 44711 do not apply to people approved to operate at a test range except where the FAA says otherwise. Range sponsors must give access to public and private users (including small businesses) as much as is practical and safe. They must keep activities inside set boundaries and altitudes, avoid reckless operations, set safe procedures (approved by the FAA), oversee activities, protect sensitive or proprietary data, keep and share records with the FAA, and give quarterly recommendations to the FAA until the program ends. The FAA may allow related research not directly about UAS integration if it helps make rules or standards. The FAA can use special authorities to enter collaborative research agreements. From amounts authorized under section 106(k), $6,000,000 is available each fiscal year for 2025 through 2028 to provide matching funds and support demonstrations; this money must be split evenly among all designated UAS test ranges and is available until spent. The program ends on September 30, 2028.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 44803
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73