UK Drone Regulations 2026 – Class Marks and Remote ID Explained

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From 1st January 2026, the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) is implementing a full update to drone and model aircraft rules.

The changes introduce new UK class marks (UK0–UK6), mandatory Remote ID, updated registration thresholds, and clearer Open Category terminology under the refreshed Drone and Model Aircraft Code.


Overview of 2026 Changes

  • UK class-marking system (UK0–UK6) applies to all drones placed on the market from 2026.
  • EU C-class drones remain recognised until 31st December 2027 as equivalent UK classes (e.g. C1 = UK1).
  • Remote ID becomes mandatory:
    • From 1st January 2026 for UK1, UK2, UK3, UK5 and UK6 class drones.
    • From 1st January 2028 for all legacy and UK0 drones weighing 100 g or more with a camera, including home-built aircraft.
  • Registration now starts at 100 g.
    • Flyer ID required from 100 g.
    • Operator ID required from 100 g if the drone has a camera, or from 250 g regardless of camera.
  • Night flying requires a flashing green light visible to others.
  • Open Category subcategories are renamed in plain English as:
    • A1 – Over People
    • A2 – Near People
    • A3 – Far from People

TLDR: From 2026, all pilots must register from 100 g, use class-marked aircraft where possible, fit a flashing green light for night flight, and ensure Remote ID is active. EU C-class drones stay valid until 2027.

See also: Understanding UK SORA · PDRA-01 Explained · GVC vs RPC-L1


UK Class Marks (UK0–UK6)

Class Operational Category Weight Notes
UK0 A1 (Over People) < 250 g Fly close to or over people, no crowds.
UK1 A1 (Over People) < 900 g Added product safety features.
UK2 A2 (Near People) / A3 (Far from People) < 4 kg Enables Near People flight under A2 CofC.
UK3 A3 (Far from People) < 25 kg General-purpose and legacy equivalents.
UK4 A3 (Far from People) < 25 kg Traditional model aircraft.
UK5 / UK6 Specific Category < 25 kg Used under UK SORA with CAA authorisation.
  • All new drones sold from 1st January 2026 must have a UK class mark.
  • EU C-class drones can continue flying as their UK equivalents until 31st December 2027 (e.g. C1 = UK1, C2 = UK2, C3 = UK3, C4 = UK4).
  • Legacy drones (no class mark) remain legal, but follow weight-based Open Category rules.

Remote ID

  • From 1st January 2026: All class-marked UK1, UK2, UK3, UK5 and UK6 drones must broadcast Remote ID.
  • From 1st January 2028: All legacy or UK0 drones ≥ 100 g with a camera, including privately built aircraft, must also broadcast Remote ID.
  • Indoor operations and drones under 100 g are exempt.
  • Remote ID must broadcast the operator ID, aircraft serial number, and current position in line with CAA-approved technical standards.

Registration and Separation Distances

Registration thresholds

  • Flyer ID: Required for drones and model aircraft 100 g or heavier.
  • Operator ID: Required for drones 100 g or heavier with a camera, or 250 g or heavier even without a camera.

Separation distances by subcategory

  • A1 – Over People

    • Drones under 250 g or class-marked C0/UK0/UK1 can fly close to and over people but must not fly over crowds.
    • Until 31st December 2027, C1 drones may be flown as UK1.
  • A2 – Near People

    • UK2 (and C2 until 31st December 2027) may fly within 30 m of uninvolved people, or as close as 5 m in low-speed mode (≤ 3 m/s).
    • Legacy drones under 2 kg can still fly in A2 but must stay at least 50 m away and must not fly overhead.
    • The A2 CofC transitional allowance for 250–500 g legacy drones ends 1st January 2026.
  • A3 – Far from People

    • Must stay at least 50 m from uninvolved people and 150 m from residential, recreational, commercial, and industrial areas.

What It Means for Different Flyers

Hobbyists and recreational pilots

  • Register once your aircraft reaches 100 g (Flyer ID) and obtain an Operator ID if it has a camera.
  • Check the UK or EU class mark to confirm which Open subcategory you can fly in.
  • Fit a flashing green light for night flight and ensure Remote ID is active by your applicable deadline.

A2 CofC holders

  • The A2 CofC remains valid beyond 2026.
  • The 250–500 g transitional rule allowing closer flight ends 1st January 2026.
  • From 2026:
    • Legacy drones < 2 kg may still fly in A2 but must keep 50 m from uninvolved people and not overfly them.
    • UK2/C2 class drones may fly 30 m from people, or 5 m in low-speed mode (≤ 3 m/s).
    • Legacy aircraft > 2 kg are restricted to A3 or the Specific Category.

Commercial operators in the Specific Category

  • Remote ID required from 2026 for all class-marked fleets, and from 2028 for legacy drones ≥ 100 g with cameras.
  • Operations must follow the UK SORA framework; PDRA-01 remains available for standard VLOS work using either a GVC or an RPC-L1.
  • Update your Operations Manual, insurance, and training records accordingly.
  • Fit flashing green lights to all drones for night operations.

Model flyers (Article 16 club members)

  • Model aircraft meeting UK4 criteria remain exempt from class-marking but must be registered from 100 g.
  • Remote ID applies from 1st January 2028 for models ≥ 100 g with cameras, unless your association has a CAA exemption.
  • Continue following Article 16 Authorisation operating distances and safety rules.

Key Takeaways

  1. Registration starts at 100 g (Flyer ID + Operator ID for cameras).
  2. UK class marks (UK0–UK6) mandatory for new drones from 2026.
  3. EU C-class drones recognised until 31st December 2027.
  4. A2 distances: UK2/C2 = 30 m (5 m low-speed), legacy < 2 kg = 50 m.
  5. Remote ID: 2026 for class-marked drones; 2028 for legacy/camera aircraft ≥ 100 g.
  6. Night flying: Flashing green light required.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do the new rules start?
From 1st January 2026, with Remote ID expanding to legacy drones in 2028.

Can I still fly my old drone?
Yes — legacy drones remain legal but must follow weight-based and Remote ID rules.

Do I need to upgrade to a class-marked drone?
Not required, but class marks provide clearer A-subcategory privileges and long-term compliance.

Are EU C-class drones still valid?
Yes — they’re recognised as equivalent UK classes until 31st December 2027.

What’s the Remote ID requirement?
Mandatory from 2026 for UK1–UK3 and UK5–UK6; from 2028 for legacy or UK0 drones ≥ 100 g with a camera.

Is a light required at night?
Yes — a flashing green light visible to others must be fitted to any drone operating after dark.

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