How to be a legit drone pilot
- John Nickolls
- 3 days ago
- 4 min read

🛸 How to Register a Drone in the UK: An Idiot’s Guide (Because We’ve All Been There)
So, you’ve bought yourself a drone. A glorious, humming, blinking bit of kit that promises soaring landscapes, aerial selfies, and hopefully not a one-way ticket into the neighbour’s conservatory. Whether it’s a DJI Mavic, a Mini 4 Pro, or something you bought on a whim at Currys, there’s one boring but essential hurdle you need to leap: registration.
Don’t worry. This isn’t like getting a mortgage or assembling IKEA furniture. It’s dead easy, and I’m going to break it down so clearly that even someone who once got banned from flying a kite near an airport could understand it.
✈️ Step 1: What the Hell Do I Need to Register?
Let’s start with a basic truth: not every drone needs the full registration shebang. The UK drone laws are sensible(ish), but they do love a flowchart. Here’s the human version:
👉 Is your drone under 250g?
Is it a toy with no camera? No registration needed.
Is it not a toy or has a camera? You need an Operator ID, at the very least.
👉 Is your drone 250g or more?
You need both an Operator ID and a Flyer ID.
If you’re unsure what your drone weighs, check the box it came in or Google it. Don’t guess. “Felt light to me” won’t cut it when a park ranger starts asking awkward questions.
🧑✈️ Step 2: Get Your Flyer ID (a.k.a. The Pilot Licence for Regular Folk)

If you’re the one actually flying the drone, this bit’s for you.
It’s not a practical flight test, thank God—nobody’s watching you nervously land your drone on the roof of your van. It’s just an online theory test that covers basic safety, flying rules, and general common sense.
Go to: register-drones.caa.co.uk
Click: “Get a flyer ID”
Study: Read the Drone and Model Aircraft Code (yes, it’s a bit like the Highway Code, but with fewer motorways and more terrified seagulls).
Take the test: It’s 40 multiple-choice questions.
Pass mark: 30 correct answers.
Time: Around 30 mins, or quicker if you’re clever.
Cost: £0. Free. Gratis. Even better than Lidl’s bakery section.
Your Flyer ID lasts 5 years, so you can swan about the skies legally for half a decade once it’s in the bag.
🛠️ Step 3: Get Your Operator ID (If You Own the Drone)
This one’s the ownership licence. Even if you don’t fly your drone—say, your mate Gary’s the designated pilot while you direct from your camping chair with a sausage roll—you still need this.
Minimum age: 18 years old
Go to: register-drones.caa.co.uk
Click: “Register as an operator”
Pay: £11.79 per year
Get: Your Operator ID (a string of letters and numbers, like “OP-123ABC456”)
Now here’s the vital bit: you must label your drone with this Operator ID. Think of it like putting your name in your pants before school camp—just in case it gets lost, breaks the rules, or ends up on the roof of a community centre.
How? Stick it on the outside. It must be:
Visible without tools
Secure
On every drone you own
Yes, even your old DJI Spark you gave to your nephew who immediately flew it into a rose bush.
📏 Step 4: Know the Drone Code (It’s Not Optional)
Now you’re legal, you’ve got to fly like a law-abiding sky ninja. That means following the Drone and Model Aircraft Code, which can be summed up as:
Stay below 400 feet (120 metres). That’s about the height of a very nervous giraffe on a trampoline.
Keep at least 50 metres away from people and property (unless you’re flying a sub-250g drone in the A1 category).
Stay in sight: No FPV daredevilry without a spotter.
Avoid airports and restricted airspace. Yes, even if you think Heathrow would look “really cool at sunset.”
Want to be extra safe? Download the Drone Assist App by Altitude Angel. It shows where you can and can’t fly, plus any temporary restrictions.
🛡️ Optional but Sensible: Insurance
If you’re just flying for fun, insurance isn’t required. But if your drone clips Aunt Brenda’s greenhouse or gets a bit too friendly with a Land Rover in Cannock Chase, you’ll wish you had it.
Public liability insurance: Available via FPV UK, BMFA, or Coverdrone.
Commercial use: Insurance is mandatory, and you may also need extra permissions (like an A2 CofC or GVC qualification).
🔁 Step 5: Keep It Updated
Flyer ID: Lasts 5 years.
Operator ID: Needs renewing annually.
Set a reminder, or tie a note to your drone if you’re forgetful. The CAA might send you a reminder, but don’t rely on them—they’re civil servants, not your nan.
🎬 Summary for Idiots (We Love You Really)
Step
What You Need to Do
Weigh your drone
Under 250g? Just Operator ID (unless it’s a toy). 250g+? You need both IDs.
Get your Flyer ID
Take free online theory test at register-drones.caa.co.uk
Get your Operator ID
Pay £11.79 a year. Label your drone.
Follow the Drone Code
Fly under 400ft, stay away from people/airports, keep it in sight.
Consider insurance
Optional but smart. Mandatory for commercial flying.
Renew on time
Flyer ID = 5 years. Operator ID = every year.
🚁 Final Thoughts
Registering your drone in the UK isn’t just about ticking boxes—it’s about flying safely, avoiding fines, and making sure the public sees drones as the cool, creative tools they are (rather than buzzing sky-menaces that peep into upstairs bathrooms).
It’s cheap, quick, and surprisingly painless. So grab your Operator ID, nail that Flyer test, slap a label on your beloved flying machine, and get back to doing what you love—taking breathtaking aerial shots of your campervan, Cannock Chase, or Monty the cocker spaniel charging through a field.
Fly safe, fly smart, and if in doubt… land it!
Want more tips, drone reviews, and scenic flight locations across the UK? Stick around on johnsdrones.net – because even legends need a pre-flight checklist.
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