Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE VII— - AVIATION PROGRAMS › Part PART A— - AIR COMMERCE AND SAFETY › Subpart subpart iii— - safety › Chapter CHAPTER 448— - UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS › § 44807
The FAA must use a risk-based method to decide how drones can fly safely in the national airspace even if other plans or rulemakings are not finished. The FAA must at least decide which drones and kinds of flights—based on size, weight, speed, capabilities, closeness to airports or people, flying over people, inside or beyond visual line of sight, and day or night—do not pose a hazard, and whether those flights need a certificate under sections 44703 or 44704 or a waiver/authorization. The FAA must set rules or accept proposed rules for safe drone operations, including testing private systems. It must allow low-risk beyond-visual-line-of-sight flights, at least for package delivery, extended visual-line-of-sight, or shielded operations within 100 feet of the ground or a structure, and may allow BVLOS that use acoustics, ground radar, ADS-B, and other tech. Flights wholly inside the Mode C Veil can meet 14 C.F.R. 91.113(b) if they use ADS-B detect-and-avoid, air traffic control coordination, acceptable aeronautical notice systems, or other FAA-set safety measures. Drones do not get right of way over manned aircraft, and the FAA can add limits for safety. The FAA’s authority to make these determinations ends on September 30, 2033. The FAA can also waive parts of the federal flight rules without a formal rulemaking when it is consistent with aviation safety.
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Citation
49 U.S.C. § 44807
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73