Commercial drone flights in Iowa require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate and compliance with federal airspace rules. State-level limits in Iowa Code 808.15 restrict government drone-gathered evidence, and FAA preemption blocks most local airspace ordinances.
Anyone flying drones for compensation in Iowa must hold an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate, register the aircraft, and follow Part 107 rules including visual line of sight, daylight or civil-twilight operation with proper anti-collision lighting, 400-foot altitude limits, and LAANC authorization in controlled airspace. Operations over people, at night, or beyond visual line of sight require waivers or compliance with the operational categories in 14 CFR 107.39 and 107.29. Iowa Code 808.15 limits state agency use of drone-gathered information, but commercial pilots must respect Iowa privacy, trespass, and nuisance statutes. Iowa cities have generally not adopted commercial drone ordinances.
Operating commercially without Part 107 certification, breaching airspace authorizations, or violating Iowa Code 808.15 can lead to FAA civil penalties of up to $75,000 per violation, certificate suspension, and state criminal charges.
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