Flying Over People (Category 1-4)
The final rule for operations over people introduced four categories based on drone weight and injury risk. Learn which category your drone falls into and how to legally fly over people without a waiver.
intermediate
Difficulty
8-12
Study Hours
9
Topics Covered
Who Is This For?
- Drone pilots flying over populated areas for events or media
- Film & TV production drone operators
- Drone manufacturers seeking FAA compliance for over-people ops
- News organizations using drones over crowds
- Public safety agencies needing to fly over people
What You'll Learn
Key Regulations
Category 1 Operations
A small UAS weighing 0.55 lbs or less (including payload) with no exposed rotating parts that could lacerate skin may fly over people without restriction.
Category 2 Operations
The UAS must not cause severe injury upon impact. Manufacturer must demonstrate compliance via an FAA-accepted means of compliance (MOC) and the drone must be labeled.
Category 3 Operations
Same injury criteria as Category 2, but operations are limited to closed/restricted sites or areas where people are under cover. Cannot fly over open-air assemblies.
Category 4 Operations
Requires an FAA airworthiness certificate under Part 21. Must have an FAA-accepted maintenance program. May operate over people and moving vehicles.
Operations Over Moving Vehicles
Category 1 and 2 drones may fly over moving vehicles. Category 3 may only operate over moving vehicles in closed/restricted areas.
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Career Opportunities
Film & TV Drone Operator
$75,000 - $150,000
Hollywood and streaming productions need pilots certified for over-people operations. Day rates of $1,500-$3,500 are common.
Live Event Coverage
$500 - $3,000/event
Concerts, sporting events, and festivals need aerial footage directly over crowds.
News Drone Pilot
$55,000 - $85,000
Breaking news coverage often requires flying over populated areas under tight deadlines.
Study Guide
Phase 1: Understand the Categories
Phase 2: Compliance & Documentation
Phase 3: Operational Planning
Frequently Asked Questions
Can the DJI Mini series fly over people?
The DJI Mini 4 Pro and similar drones under 0.55 lbs (250g) generally qualify as Category 1, allowing flight over people. However, they must have no exposed rotating parts that could lacerate skin — prop guards are recommended.
Do I need a waiver to fly over people if my drone is Category 2?
No. If your drone has an FAA-accepted means of compliance and is properly labeled as Category 2, you can fly over people without a waiver under the final rule.
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