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Guide ยท After you're certified

9 Drone Business Ideas You Can Start With a Part 107

The certificate is the easy part. Here's what people actually do with it โ€” nine real niches, what each takes to start, and how to land that first paying client.

First, the honest part

A Part 107 doesn't pay you โ€” it makes it legal to get paid. Every flight for a business purpose requires the certificate. After that, a drone business is a real small business: you find clients, deliver good work, and build a reputation. No guarantees, but the niches below are where pilots genuinely earn.

Once you've passed the exam (see how to get your Part 107), the question becomes "now what?" These nine niches are ordered roughly from easiest-to-start to most specialized.

1.Real estate photography & video

The classic first niche. Agents want aerial stills and short cinematic flythroughs to make listings pop, and the flights are simple โ€” open suburban lots, good light, in and out. Low barrier, steady local demand.

What it takes: a solid camera drone, basic photo/video editing, and a few local agents to say yes.

2.Roof inspections

Roofers, insurance adjusters, and home inspectors love drones because they replace a dangerous ladder climb with a 10-minute flight. You capture close-up imagery of damage without anyone leaving the ground.

What it takes: a drone with a sharp zoom or high-res camera, steady manual control, and relationships with local roofing/insurance contacts.

3.Cell tower & infrastructure inspections

Telecom and utility companies inspect towers, bridges, and power lines from the air to avoid sending crews up. Higher-skill, higher-stakes work that often pays accordingly โ€” but expect safety vetting and sometimes additional certifications.

What it takes: precise flying near obstacles, strong safety discipline, and often contractor/insurance requirements.

4.Mapping & surveying

By flying an automated grid and stitching hundreds of overlapping photos, you produce orthomosaic maps, 3D models, and volume measurements for surveyors, builders, and land developers. This is technical, software-heavy work with strong margins.

What it takes: mapping software (e.g. photogrammetry tools), an understanding of ground control, and patience to learn the workflow.

5.Construction progress documentation

General contractors want a consistent monthly aerial record of a site for stakeholders, marketing, and dispute resolution. It's recurring revenue: same site, same flight, every few weeks.

What it takes: reliability, a repeatable flight plan, and one good relationship with a builder.

6.Agriculture

Farms use drone imagery โ€” including specialized sensors โ€” to spot crop stress, irrigation problems, and pest issues across large fields. A growing niche, especially in rural areas with less competition.

What it takes: often a multispectral/NDVI sensor, ag-analysis software, and local farm connections.

7.Solar panel inspections

A thermal camera reveals dead or failing solar cells instantly as hot spots. Solar installers and operators pay for fast, no-climb inspections across rooftops and large arrays.

What it takes: a drone with a thermal camera and a basic grasp of reading thermal imagery.

8.Events, weddings & sports

Aerial coverage adds a wow factor to weddings, festivals, and local sporting events. Be mindful: flying over crowds has real restrictions, so this takes care and the right operating approach.

What it takes: cinematic camera skills, careful crowd/airspace planning, and a portfolio reel.

9.Social media content & local marketing

Restaurants, gyms, resorts, golf courses, and local businesses all want eye-catching aerial content for ads and social. Package it as a monthly content retainer and it becomes predictable income.

What it takes: short-form editing chops, a sense for marketing, and outreach to local businesses.

How to land your first client

  • Build a reel first. Shoot a few free or practice locations so you have proof you can deliver before you pitch.
  • Pick one niche and one neighborhood. "Real estate aerials for agents in my town" beats "drone services" every time.
  • Get insured. Commercial drone liability insurance is cheap and the thing serious clients ask about first.
  • Stay legal. Authorization in controlled airspace, registration, and good records protect the business you're building. Brush up with our airspace guide.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a Part 107 license to make money with a drone?

Yes. Any drone flight for a business or commercial purpose in the U.S. requires an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate, regardless of how much you're paid.

What is the easiest drone business to start?

Real estate photography is the most common entry point โ€” affordable gear, simple flights, and steady local demand from agents who always need fresh listing media.

How much can you make with a drone business?

It varies widely by niche, location, skill, and effort, so there are no guarantees. Simple shoots are priced per job; specialized work like mapping or inspections commands more. Treat it like any small business you have to build.

It all starts with passing the test.

Get certified the efficient way โ€” 800 explained questions, a 22-lesson course, embedded chart practice for the Oct 27 format, and an AI study coach. One-time $39.99, no subscription, 7-day money-back guarantee.