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DRONE BUSINESS · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

drone-compliance-documentation-guide

TS行政書士
Supervisé par Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Conseil Administratif Agréé, JaponTout le contenu MmowW est supervisé par un expert en conformité réglementaire agréé au niveau national.
Build complete drone compliance documentation across 10 countries including operations manuals, risk assessments, and emergency procedures. The operations manual is the central compliance document for most drone operators. It describes the organisation, its operations, procedures, and safety management approach. The UK CAA, EU authorities (for Specific category), CASA, and other regulators specify the expected content and structure.
Table of Contents
  1. Operations Manual Structure
  2. Risk Assessment Documentation
  3. Standard Operating Procedures
  4. Document Control and Version Management
  5. Practical Implementation Steps
  6. 10-Country Regulatory Comparison
  7. Free Drone Compliance Tools
  8. Frequently Asked Questions
  9. Do I need an operations manual?
  10. How detailed should risk assessments be?
  11. How often should I update my documentation?
  12. What format should compliance documents be in?
  13. Who should approve compliance documentation?

Drone Compliance Documentation Complete Guide

Comprehensive compliance documentation forms the foundation of professional drone operations. An operations manual, risk assessments, emergency procedures, and supporting documentation demonstrate organisational capability to regulators, clients, and insurers. Each country specifies documentation requirements proportionate to the operational complexity.

Operations Manual Structure

Termes Clés dans Cet Article

Specific Category
A medium-risk drone operation category requiring a risk assessment (SORA) and operational authorization.
GVC
General VLOS Certificate — the UK qualification for commercial drone operations in the Open A2 subcategory.
Part 107
FAA regulation governing commercial drone operations in the United States.
SORA
Specific Operations Risk Assessment — EASA methodology for evaluating drone operation risks.
OA
Operational Authorisation — UK CAA permission required for Specific Category drone operations.

The operations manual is the central compliance document for most drone operators. It describes the organisation, its operations, procedures, and safety management approach. The UK CAA, EU authorities (for Specific category), CASA, and other regulators specify the expected content and structure.

A typical operations manual includes: organisational structure and responsibilities, aircraft specifications and limitations, normal operating procedures, emergency procedures, maintenance procedures, training and proficiency requirements, safety management system, and risk assessment methodology.

The manual should be a living document, updated whenever procedures change, new equipment is introduced, or regulations are updated. Version control and change tracking demonstrate active document management to auditors. Each revision should include a summary of changes, the date of implementation, and the name of the person who approved the update.

Risk Assessment Documentation

Risk assessments must be documented, site-specific, and regularly reviewed. Generic risk assessments that apply blanket mitigations without considering specific operational conditions do not satisfy regulatory expectations in any of the 10 countries.

Each risk assessment should identify the specific hazards of the planned operation, evaluate the likelihood and severity of each hazard, describe existing mitigations, determine residual risk acceptability, and identify any additional mitigations required. For EU Specific category operations, SORA provides the mandatory framework. SORA assessments require operators to evaluate both ground risk and air risk classes, resulting in a Specific Assurance and Integrity Level (SAIL) that determines the operational safety objectives.

Maintain a library of risk assessments for recurring operational scenarios but review and adapt them for each specific deployment. Environmental conditions, equipment status, and personnel availability change between operations.

Standard Operating Procedures

SOPs translate the operations manual's general procedures into step-by-step instructions for specific tasks. Well-written SOPs reduce variability in how different team members execute critical procedures.

Key SOPs include pre-flight checks, flight operations, post-flight procedures, battery management, data handling, client communication, and emergency response. Each SOP should specify who performs the task, what equipment or resources are needed, the step-by-step procedure, and quality checks or verification steps.

SOPs should be accessible to all team members during operations. Laminated quick-reference cards or mobile device access ensures SOPs are used in practice, not just during training.

Document Control and Version Management

Professional document management prevents confusion between current and outdated procedures. Implement a version control system with unique document numbers, revision dates, approval signatures, and distribution records.

When documents are updated, ensure all copies are replaced and that team members are briefed on changes. Retain superseded versions for audit trail purposes but clearly mark them as superseded to prevent accidental use.

Digital document management systems simplify version control, distribution, and retrieval. Cloud-based systems enable access from field locations while maintaining centralised control. Whichever system you choose, ensure it provides reliable backup, access logging, and the ability to demonstrate document history to auditors.

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Practical Implementation Steps

Building a complete documentation system from scratch can seem overwhelming. The following structured approach helps operators develop their compliance documentation systematically.

Start with the operations manual. Use your national aviation authority's published template or guidance as the structural foundation. The UK CAA provides Operations Manual Guidance (CAP 722), EU states reference EASA AMC/GM material, and CASA provides template structures for ReOC applicants. Adapt these frameworks to your specific operations rather than creating a structure from scratch.

Next, develop your risk assessment methodology. Document your approach to hazard identification, risk evaluation, and mitigation selection. Then create your first site-specific risk assessment using this methodology. This establishes the pattern that all subsequent assessments will follow.

Build your SOP library incrementally. Start with the SOPs required for your most common operations: pre-flight checks, standard flight procedures, and emergency responses. Add specialised SOPs as your operation expands into new types of work or new environments.

Establish the document control system early. Even if you initially have only a few documents, implementing version control, approval workflows, and distribution tracking from the beginning prevents the need to retrofit these systems later when your documentation library grows.

Finally, schedule regular reviews. Set calendar reminders for quarterly documentation reviews and annual comprehensive assessments. Assign specific documents to specific team members for ownership, ensuring every document has someone responsible for keeping it current.

10-Country Regulatory Comparison

Documentation UK DE FR NL SE AU NZ CA US JP
Operations manual Required (GVC) Required (Specific) Required (Specific) Required (Specific) Required (Specific) Required (ReOC) Exposition required Required (Advanced) Best practice Required (Cat II/III)
Risk assessment Required SORA required SORA required SORA required SORA required Required Required Required Recommended Required
Emergency procedures Required Required Required Required Required Required Required Required Recommended Required
SOPs Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Required Required Expected Recommended Expected
Version control Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Required Required Expected Best practice Expected
Language requirement English German or English French Dutch or English Swedish or English English English English or French English Japanese
Template provided CAP 722 guidance EASA AMC/GM EASA AMC/GM EASA AMC/GM EASA AMC/GM CASA templates CAA NZ Part 102 TC advisory FAA Part 107 guide MLIT guidelines

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need an operations manual?

Most countries require an operations manual for commercial or advanced operations. The UK requires one for GVC holders, EU states for Specific category, Australia for ReOC holders, and Japan for Category II/III. Even where not strictly required, a manual demonstrates professionalism and provides a structured reference for your team. Having a well-maintained operations manual also strengthens your position during audits and can support insurance claims by demonstrating established safety procedures.

How detailed should risk assessments be?

Risk assessments should be specific to each operation, identifying the actual hazards of the planned site and conditions. Generic assessments are insufficient. Include hazard identification, likelihood and severity analysis, mitigations, and residual risk determination. For EU Specific category operations, the SORA methodology provides the mandatory framework, requiring evaluation of ground risk class, air risk class, and specific assurance levels. Even in countries where SORA is not mandatory, adopting a structured methodology demonstrates thoroughness to regulators and clients.

How often should I update my documentation?

Update whenever procedures change, new equipment is introduced, regulations change, or lessons learned from operations reveal improvements. At minimum, conduct an annual review of all compliance documentation. Many operators find that quarterly reviews strike the right balance between staying current and managing administrative workload. Document each review in a log, even when no changes are needed, to demonstrate ongoing attention to documentation currency.

What format should compliance documents be in?

All 10 countries accept digital and paper formats. Choose the format that ensures accessibility, version control, and backup. Many operators use a combination of digital storage with key documents available in print for field use. Cloud-based document management systems offer advantages for version control and multi-user access but require reliable internet connectivity. Whichever format you choose, ensure documents can be presented to auditors in a readable format within a reasonable timeframe.

Who should approve compliance documentation?

The accountable manager or organisational head should approve compliance documentation. Some countries require specific roles to sign off on operations manuals and risk assessments. Check your national authority's requirements for document approval responsibilities. In larger organisations, consider implementing a two-stage approval process where a subject matter expert reviews technical content before the accountable manager provides final sign-off. Document all approvals with names, dates, and signatures to create a clear audit trail.


Loved for Safety.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always verify current regulations with your national aviation authority: CAA (UK), LBA (Germany), DGAC (France), ILT (Netherlands), Transportstyrelsen (Sweden), CASA (Australia), CAA (New Zealand), Transport Canada (Canada), FAA (USA), MLIT (Japan). MmowW is not a certification body, auditor, or regulatory authority.

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TS
Takayuki Sawai
Gyoseishoshi (Licensed Administrative Professional, Japan)
Licensed compliance professional helping drone operators navigate aviation regulations across 10 countries through MmowW.

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Loved for Safety.

Important disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Regulations change frequently. Always verify current requirements with your country's aviation authority before operating commercially. MmowW provides compliance tools and information — we are not a certification body, auditor, or regulatory authority. Authorities: CAA (UK), LBA (Germany), DGAC (France), ILT (Netherlands), Transportstyrelsen (Sweden), CASA (Australia), CAA (New Zealand), Transport Canada, FAA (USA), MLIT (Japan).

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