The honest answer is "it depends why you're flying." Here's exactly when you need a license, when you don't, and what the FAA actually requires in 2026.
Fly for fun? No pilot license โ but you must pass the free TRUST test and register any drone 0.55 lb or heavier. Fly for any business or paid purpose? You need the FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate, no matter how small the drone.
It's the first question almost everyone asks, and the internet is full of half-answers. The truth is simple once you split it the way the FAA does: why you fly matters more than what you fly. Let's break down both paths so you know exactly where you stand.
The FAA puts every drone flight into one of two buckets. Recreational flying is purely for fun or personal enjoyment โ no business purpose, no payment, no "in furtherance of a business." Everything else is commercial, which the FAA governs under 14 CFR Part 107. The two paths have completely different requirements.
You do not need a Part 107 pilot certificate to fly recreationally, but "no license" doesn't mean "no rules." To fly legally for fun you must:
That's it. No knowledge test, no $175 fee โ just TRUST, registration, and following the rules.
The moment money or a business purpose enters the picture, you're under Part 107 and you need the Remote Pilot Certificate. And "commercial" is broader than people think. You need Part 107 if you:
To get certified you must be at least 16, speak and read English, pass a one-time $175 FAA knowledge test, and clear a TSA background check. We walk through the whole process in how to get your Part 107 license, and the full checklist of Part 107 requirements.
Most people get tripped up here. A "free" job for a friend's business, footage you might sell later, content that grows a brand โ these all lean commercial. The FAA looks at intent and benefit, not whether cash changed hands today. The safe move is simple: if there's any business angle, fly under Part 107. It's the broader, stricter authority, and being certified never hurts.
Weight is a registration question, not a licensing one. A sub-250-gram drone flown purely for fun doesn't need to be registered. But fly that same tiny drone for any business purpose and you still need a Part 107 certificate โ and under Part 107 you register the aircraft regardless of weight. So the popular "it's under 250g, so I don't need anything" idea only applies to recreational flying.
If you're flying for fun, take TRUST and register at the FAA DroneZone โ you're done in an afternoon. If you're going commercial, the certificate is very passable with focused study: start with our free Part 107 practice test and study guide, and remember the test is changing on October 27, 2026 to put charts directly inside the questions.
No pilot certificate โ but you must pass the free TRUST test, follow a community-based organization's safety guidelines, and register any drone weighing 0.55 lb or more.
Weight doesn't change the commercial rule. If you fly for any business or non-recreational purpose you need a Part 107 certificate even for a sub-250-gram drone, and you must register it. Sub-250-gram drones flown only for fun are exempt from registration.
Flying commercially without a Part 107 certificate โ or flying without registering a drone that requires it โ can bring FAA civil penalties. Recreational flying is legal without a pilot certificate as long as you pass TRUST and follow the recreational rules.
The recreational TRUST test is free. The Part 107 commercial certificate requires passing a $175 FAA knowledge test, plus $5 to register your drone for three years.
The full app has 800 explained questions, a 22-lesson course, embedded chart practice for the new Oct 27 format, and an AI study coach. One-time $39.99, no subscription, 7-day money-back guarantee.