FAA Eases Drone Rules with Faster Waiver Process Rollout
Published Date: 4/1/2026
Notice
Summary
The FAA is rolling out a new waiver process to help drone operators fly in ways that don’t fit current rules. This change makes it easier and faster for certain unmanned aircraft to get permission without jumping through complicated hoops. Starting now, affected drone pilots can apply for these waivers, saving time and possibly money while keeping the skies safe.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
New Section 927 Waiver Path
The FAA will use Section 927 (from the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024) as an alternative path to exemptions so drone operators can request regulatory relief without having to show the requested relief benefits the public as a whole. You still must demonstrate the operation would not adversely affect safety or would provide an equal level of safety.
Waivers Target Specific Use Cases
FAA will consider Section 927 waivers especially for operations with minimal public impact, high-value limited use cases (for example, disaster relief, first responder, or search and rescue missions), and emerging use cases involving new technologies or iterative testing. The notice lists these four eligibility considerations: minimal impact, high-value limited use, emerging use case, and other safety considerations.
Safety Standard Remains Identical
FAA will apply the same safety standard to Section 927 waivers as it does to exemptions: applicants must show operations would not adversely affect safety or would provide a level of safety equal to the rule. The agency says the safety analysis for waivers and exemptions will be identical.
You Must Pick One Pathway
Applicants cannot apply for an exemption and a Section 927 waiver at the same time; they must choose one pathway. If you withdraw an exemption to apply for a Section 927 waiver, waiver requests are handled on a first-come, first-served basis and you will not receive priority or expedited treatment.
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