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Drone Rules

How Springfield Handles Drone Rules: A Practical Guide

By CityRuleLookup Editorial Team

Springfield maintains 112 local ordinances across all categories, and 2 of those deal specifically with drone rules. Here is a breakdown of what the city actually requires, what is prohibited, and where Springfield falls on the strict-to-permissive spectrum compared to other cities.

Recreational Drones

Springfield recreational drone use is governed by FAA rules and local ordinances. Drones under 55 lbs must be registered with the FAA. No flying near airports.

Key details: Registration: FAA required if over 0.55 lbs. Max Altitude: 400 feet AGL. Airports: Restricted airspace, no fly. TRUST Test: Required for all flyers.

FAA violations: $1,000 to $27,500 per incident. Local park violations: $50 to $500. Reckless operation near airports: criminal penalties.

Commercial Drones

Springfield commercial drone operators must hold a Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate from the FAA. Additional local permits may be required for filming or surveying.

Key details: License: FAA Part 107 required. Renewal: Every 24 months. Controlled Airspace: LAANC authorization needed. Business Permit: May be required locally.

Operating commercially without Part 107: FAA fines up to $32,666. Local permit violations: $100 to $1,000. Unauthorized airspace entry: federal criminal penalties.

Compared to other cities, Springfield takes a harder line on commercial drones. The enforcement and penalty structure reflects that.

The Bottom Line

Springfield's drone rules rules are a mixed bag. Some areas are strict, others are relaxed, and the details matter. The best approach is to check the specific rule that applies to your situation rather than assuming Springfield is broadly strict or permissive.

These rules come from Springfield's publicly available municipal code. For complete penalty schedules, exemption details, and answers to common questions, see the individual ordinance pages throughout this guide.