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

Drone Flight Crew Management 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.
Compare drone crew management requirements across 10 countries. Learn about crew roles, qualifications, visual observers, and crew resource management for commercial operations. Commercial drone operations involve more than a single pilot and a drone. Complex missions require visual observers, ground safety personnel, payload operators, and client liaisons working together. Poor crew management is a contributing factor in drone incidents worldwide. Clear roles, defined communication protocols, and documented competency standards separate professional operations from amateur efforts.
Table of Contents
  1. Why Crew Management Determines Operational Success
  2. Crew Role Requirements by Country
  3. Crew Roles Defined
  4. Remote Pilot in Command (RPIC)
  5. Visual Observers (VO)
  6. Ground Safety Personnel
  7. Payload Operators
  8. Crew Competency and Training
  9. Formal Training Requirements
  10. Crew Currency Requirements
  11. Crew Resource Management (CRM) for Drones
  12. Frequently Asked Questions
  13. How many visual observers do I need for a commercial drone operation?
  14. Can one pilot manage multiple drones simultaneously?
  15. Do visual observers need formal training or credentials?
  16. What is the maximum distance between the RPIC and a visual observer?
  17. Can a client serve as a visual observer during drone operations?
  18. Take the Next Step

Drone Flight Crew Management Guide

AIO Answer: Drone crew management requirements vary across countries. All 10 countries designate the Remote Pilot in Command (RPIC) as the person responsible for flight safety. Visual Observers are required or recommended in most jurisdictions for maintaining visual line of sight. The UK and EU require crew competency documentation under Specific category. Australia mandates crew qualifications under ReOC conditions. The US requires a Part 107 certified pilot with optional visual observers. Japan requires designated pilots for specific flights with documented qualifications.

Why Crew Management Determines Operational Success

Termes Clés dans Cet Article

BVLOS
Beyond Visual Line of Sight — flying a drone beyond the pilot's direct visual range, requiring special authorization.
Open Category
The lowest-risk drone operation category under EU/UK regulations for drones under 25kg without prior authorization.
Specific Category
A medium-risk drone operation category requiring a risk assessment (SORA) and operational authorization.
Part 107
FAA regulation governing commercial drone operations in the United States.
OA
Operational Authorisation — UK CAA permission required for Specific Category drone operations.

Commercial drone operations involve more than a single pilot and a drone. Complex missions require visual observers, ground safety personnel, payload operators, and client liaisons working together. Poor crew management is a contributing factor in drone incidents worldwide. Clear roles, defined communication protocols, and documented competency standards separate professional operations from amateur efforts.

Crew Role Requirements by Country

Country RPIC Required Visual Observer Ground Crew Crew Competency Docs Max Crew Size Limit
UK Yes Recommended (Open), Required (some OA) As needed Required (Specific) No limit
DE Yes As per OA conditions As needed Required (Specific) No limit
FR Yes As per OA conditions As needed Required (Specific) No limit
NL Yes As per OA conditions As needed Required (Specific) No limit
SE Yes As per OA conditions As needed Required (Specific) No limit
AU Yes Required for most ops As needed Required (ReOC) No limit
NZ Yes Recommended As needed Per certificate No limit
CA Yes Required (controlled airspace) As needed Per certificate No limit
US Yes (Part 107 cert) Optional but allowed As needed Part 107 certificate No limit
JP Yes Required for specific flights As needed DIPS 2.0 records No limit

Crew Roles Defined

Remote Pilot in Command (RPIC)

The RPIC has ultimate authority and responsibility for the safe conduct of the flight. In all 10 countries, the RPIC must:

Credential requirements range from the US Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate (approximately $175 exam fee, recurrent testing free online every 24 months) to Australia's RePL (Remote Pilot Licence) for ReOC operations. EU states require competency certificates corresponding to the operational category (A1/A3 online test EUR 25, A2 proctored exam EUR 230-920 depending on the provider). The UK Flyer ID is free; Operator ID costs GBP 10.33/year.

Visual Observers (VO)

Visual observers extend the pilot's ability to maintain visual contact with the drone and scan for hazards. Requirements vary:

Ground Safety Personnel

Ground safety personnel manage the operational area to protect third parties. While not formally regulated in most countries, professional operations include:

Payload Operators

For missions requiring real-time payload management (camera operation, sensor control), a dedicated payload operator frees the RPIC to focus on flight safety. While not a regulatory requirement in any country, it is an operational best practice for complex missions.

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Crew Competency and Training

Formal Training Requirements

United States: Part 107 certification requires passing the Unmanned Aircraft General knowledge test at an FAA-approved testing center (approximately $175). Recurrent testing is free online every 24 months. No flight skills test is required.

United Kingdom: The UK requires online theory training and testing for Open category (A2 CofC requires additional assessment). Specific category requires competency appropriate to the operation's risk level, documented in the operations manual.

European Union: EASA mandates online training and examination for A1/A3 (approximately EUR 25), proctored examination for A2 (EUR 230-920). Specific category training requirements are defined by the risk assessment and documented in the operator's manual.

Australia: CASA requires the RePL for ReOC operations, which includes both theory and practical flight assessments at a CASA-approved training facility.

Japan: Remote pilots for specific flights must demonstrate competency through MLIT-approved training or examination. The First Class and Second Class UAS Pilot Certificates (一等/二等無人航空機操縦士) were introduced in December 2022 for advanced operations.

Canada: Basic and Advanced certificates require passing knowledge tests. Advanced endorsement requires a flight review. SFOC applicants must demonstrate relevant competency.

Crew Currency Requirements

Maintaining crew currency — ensuring pilots and observers have recent, relevant experience — is addressed differently:

Crew Resource Management (CRM) for Drones

CRM principles adapted from manned aviation apply directly to drone operations:

  1. Communication: Establish clear communication protocols before the mission. Define standard callouts for altitude, battery status, and hazard alerts. Use radio discipline on shared frequencies.
  2. Situational Awareness: The RPIC must maintain awareness of the drone, surrounding airspace, ground conditions, and crew status simultaneously. Visual observers share this responsibility.
  3. Decision Making: Establish authority gradients that allow any crew member to call a halt to operations if they identify a safety concern. The RPIC has final authority but must be receptive to crew inputs.
  4. Workload Management: Distribute tasks appropriately. An overloaded RPIC makes poor decisions. Assign monitoring tasks to VOs and ground crew.
  5. Error Management: Brief potential errors before the mission. Establish checklists and cross-checks. Debrief after every mission to identify and learn from errors.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many visual observers do I need for a commercial drone operation?

The number depends on the operational area, terrain, and line-of-sight requirements. A single VO is sufficient for small area operations. Linear infrastructure inspections (pipelines, power lines) may require VOs positioned along the route. No country specifies a maximum or minimum number, but your risk assessment must demonstrate that VLOS can be maintained throughout the flight.

Can one pilot manage multiple drones simultaneously?

Multi-aircraft operations require special authorization in most countries. The US requires a Part 107 waiver. The UK and EU are developing frameworks. Japan permits multi-aircraft operations with MLIT authorization under specific conditions. The key challenge is maintaining situational awareness across multiple aircraft — most current authorizations require automated flight management systems with the pilot monitoring rather than directly controlling each aircraft.

Do visual observers need formal training or credentials?

Requirements vary. In the US, VOs do not need Part 107 certification but must be briefed by the RPIC on their duties. In the UK and EU, VO competency is defined in the operations manual for Specific category operations. Australia requires VOs to be briefed and competent per the ReOC procedures. Japan requires supplementary personnel (補助者) to be briefed and their qualifications documented. At minimum, all VOs should be trained in hazard identification, communication protocols, and emergency procedures.

What is the maximum distance between the RPIC and a visual observer?

No country specifies a maximum RPIC-to-VO distance, but VOs must be able to communicate effectively with the RPIC in real time. Practical limits depend on communication equipment (radio range), terrain, and environmental conditions. Most operations keep VOs within radio communication range and close enough for immediate coordination.

Can a client serve as a visual observer during drone operations?

While not explicitly prohibited in most countries, using a client as a VO creates significant risks. Clients typically lack training in hazard identification, communication protocols, and emergency procedures. Professional operators avoid this practice. If a client wants to be involved, brief them on safety procedures but do not rely on them for safety-critical roles. Your operations manual should define minimum VO qualifications.

Take the Next Step

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Drone regulations change frequently. Always verify current requirements with your national aviation authority before conducting operations.

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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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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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