If you’re planning on flying a drone to survey your site in Australia, you need to register with the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) beforehand. When flying drones for business the requirements differ depending on the craft size. CASA places drones into the following size categories:
While there are many types of drones out there, smaller quadcopters, like DJI’s Phantom 4 RTK, are usually all you need to survey your site successfully. However, all drones flown commercially must be registered with CASA no matter the size of the drone. These CASA requirements are detailed further in this help article.
To fly a drone under two kilograms for business, pilots require:
To fly a drone greater than two kilograms for business, pilots require:
Using that ARN, fill out the online notification form to let CASA know when you’re flying and where.
This notification lasts for three years before you have to renew. It’s great for long-term operations, like quarries and mines, but you and also let CASA know that you’ll be working in a given region as a civil contractor, too, if you’re flying multiple sites for different jobs.
When you’re doing a survey via drone, you need to follow the rules of the sky. Some of these rules are straightforward like fly only one drone at a time and don’t fly dangerously or in restricted areas, but others are more specific.
If you want or need to operate outside of those conditions, there is more regulation. A business requires their ReOC and, as an individual, you’d need to get your remote operator’s certificate (RePL). (Find out how here.)
But in our experience only about one in 20 people actually need to go that far. The ARN is usually sufficient for most site drone programs, so get registered with CASA today and start flying your site today.