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FAA / UASintermediate15-20 hours (ongoing reference)

Starting a Commercial Drone Business

Turn your Part 107 certificate into a profitable business. This comprehensive guide covers business planning, pricing, insurance, marketing, and building a client base in the rapidly growing commercial drone industry.

intermediate

Difficulty

15-20

Study Hours

10

Topics Covered

Who Is This For?

  • Part 107 holders ready to start a drone business
  • Freelance photographers adding drone services
  • Entrepreneurs entering the commercial drone market
  • Existing businesses adding aerial capabilities
  • Military/law enforcement transitioning to civilian drone careers

What You'll Learn

1Business planning and LLC formation for drone services
2Insurance requirements: liability ($1M+), hull, and E&O coverage
3Pricing strategies by industry (real estate, construction, agriculture)
4Equipment selection for commercial work (DJI, Autel, Skydio)
5Client acquisition and marketing for drone services
6Contract templates and scope-of-work documents
7Post-processing workflows: Lightroom, DaVinci Resolve, Pix4D
8Scaling from solo operator to multi-pilot operation
9Tax deductions and business expenses for drone operators
10Building a portfolio and online presence

Key Regulations

14 CFR 107.12

Remote Pilot Certificate Required

All commercial drone operations require a current Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. This is non-negotiable for any paid drone work.

14 CFR 107.7

Inspection, Testing, and Demonstration of Compliance

The remote PIC must make available to the FAA upon request the small UAS for inspection or testing and any associated documents.

14 CFR 107.49

Preflight Familiarization, Inspection, and Actions

Before each flight, the remote PIC must assess operating environment, local weather, nearby airspace, and ensure the sUAS is in safe operating condition.

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Business Applications

Revenue Opportunities

  • Real estate photography & videography ($150-$400/property)
  • Construction progress monitoring ($2,000-$8,000/month retainer)
  • Roof inspections for insurance ($100-$250/inspection)
  • Agricultural crop monitoring ($8-$15/acre)
  • Solar panel inspection ($500-$2,000/site)
  • Wedding & event coverage ($500-$2,500/event)
  • Marketing & commercial video production ($1,000-$10,000/project)

Real Estate Aerial Photography

$75,000 - $120,000

Average $150-$400 per property. Top operators shoot 8-15 properties per week.

Construction Site Monitoring

$80,000 - $130,000

Weekly progress reports for construction sites. Monthly retainers of $2,000-$8,000 per site.

Agricultural Drone Services

$60,000 - $100,000

Crop health monitoring, spray operations, and NDVI mapping. Seasonal but high-volume.

Full-Service Drone Company Owner

$100,000 - $300,000+

Multi-service operations with multiple pilots can generate significant revenue across industries.

Study Guide

1

Phase 1: Business Foundation

Form an LLC and obtain an EIN for your drone business
Get drone insurance: $1M liability minimum (Skywatch, Verifly, BWI)
Open a business bank account and set up accounting (QuickBooks)
Research your local market and identify underserved niches
2

Phase 2: Equipment & Skills

Invest in commercial-grade equipment (DJI Mavic 3 Pro or Inspire 3 for starters)
Learn post-processing: Lightroom Classic, DaVinci Resolve, Pix4D
Build a portfolio with 10-15 demo projects (offer free shoots to build work)
Create delivery templates and standard operating procedures
3

Phase 3: Marketing & Sales

Build a professional website showcasing your aerial portfolio
Set up Google Business Profile for local SEO
Network with realtors, contractors, and local businesses
List on drone service marketplaces (DroneBase, Zeitview, Droners.io)
4

Phase 4: Scale & Grow

Develop retainer contracts for recurring clients
Hire subcontract pilots for overflow work
Add specialized services (thermal, LiDAR, mapping) for premium pricing
Track financials and reinvest in equipment and marketing

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to start a drone business?

A realistic startup budget is $3,000-$10,000. This covers a commercial drone ($1,000-$3,000), insurance ($500-$1,500/year), LLC formation ($50-$500), and basic post-processing software. High-end setups with LiDAR or thermal can cost $15,000-$40,000+.

How much can a drone pilot make per year?

Solo drone operators typically earn $50,000-$100,000 in their first year. Established businesses with multiple pilots and specialized services can earn $150,000-$300,000+. Top earners in film/TV or industrial inspection can exceed $200,000.

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