Commercial drone operations in Riverside County require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate and compliance with 14 CFR Part 107. The FAA preempts airspace regulation, but the county restricts drone takeoff and landing on county property and requires a film permit from the Inland Empire Film Commission or Regional Park District for commercial shoots on public land.
Under Part 107 commercial pilots must be 16 or older, pass the Aeronautical Knowledge Test, register the drone, keep it under 400 feet, maintain visual line of sight (unless a BVLOS waiver is held), and avoid controlled airspace without LAANC authorization. Flights over people require compliance with the Operations Over People rule (categories 1 through 4) or a Part 107.39 waiver, and night operations require anti-collision lighting. Riverside County does not regulate airspace directly but controls ground-level takeoff and landing on county-owned parcels: a Film Permit from the Riverside County Film Commission is required for commercial filming on county roads, parks, or unincorporated parcels, typically including proof of 1 million dollars liability insurance and a certificate of FAA compliance. Real-estate and surveying flights over private property require property-owner consent. Wildfires, TFRs, and the Camp Pendleton boundary in the southwest county create additional no-fly zones. Remote ID broadcasting is now required on all Part 107 aircraft. Violations risk FAA civil penalties up to 75,000 dollars per incident plus local trespass enforcement.
Specific penalty amounts for this ordinance are not published in a publicly accessible fine schedule. Contact Riverside County code enforcement directly for current fines, enforcement procedures, and hearing options.
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