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

drone-incident-investigation-guide

TS行政書士
Expert-supervised by Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Licensed Administrative Scrivener, JapanAll MmowW content is supervised by a nationally licensed regulatory compliance expert.
Learn how to investigate drone incidents properly across 10 countries including evidence preservation, root cause analysis, and regulatory reporting requirements. Drone incident investigation follows a structured process: secure the scene, preserve evidence, collect data, analyse causes, identify contributing factors, develop corrective actions, and document findings. This process applies regardless of country, though reporting requirements and investigation authority involvement vary.
Table of Contents
  1. Investigation Process Overview
  2. Evidence Preservation and Collection
  3. Root Cause Analysis Techniques
  4. Corrective Action Implementation
  5. National Investigation Body Roles
  6. Near-Miss Investigation and Safety Culture
  7. Compliance Implementation Steps
  8. 10-Country Safety Regulation Comparison
  9. Assess Your Drone Operation Risks
  10. Frequently Asked Questions
  11. Do I have to investigate drone incidents myself?
  12. How quickly must I report a drone incident?
  13. What evidence should I preserve after an incident?
  14. What is root cause analysis?
  15. How do I prevent incident recurrence?

Drone Incident Investigation Guide for Operators

Drone incident investigation requires systematic evidence collection, root cause analysis, and regulatory reporting. Each of the 10 countries has specific reporting requirements and investigation processes. Operators who conduct thorough internal investigations alongside regulatory reporting improve their safety performance and demonstrate organisational maturity.

Investigation Process Overview

Key Terms in This Article

Part 107
FAA regulation governing commercial drone operations in the United States.
OA
Operational Authorisation — UK CAA permission required for Specific Category drone operations.

Drone incident investigation follows a structured process: secure the scene, preserve evidence, collect data, analyse causes, identify contributing factors, develop corrective actions, and document findings. This process applies regardless of country, though reporting requirements and investigation authority involvement vary.

The immediate priority after any incident is ensuring the safety of all persons involved. Once immediate safety is addressed, evidence preservation becomes critical. Flight logs, telemetry data, battery status, weather conditions, and witness accounts all contribute to understanding what happened.

Operators should not wait for the national investigation body to investigate. Internal investigations conducted promptly while evidence is fresh provide the most useful safety learning. The regulatory investigation and the operator's internal investigation serve complementary purposes.

Evidence Preservation and Collection

Critical evidence includes flight controller logs, telemetry recordings, battery data, control link logs, and any onboard camera footage. Environmental data including weather observations, electromagnetic interference readings, and airspace information should be recorded.

Physical evidence from the drone itself should be preserved in its post-incident condition. Do not repair, modify, or update firmware before completing the investigation. Photograph the drone, the incident site, and any damage from multiple angles.

Witness statements should be collected as soon as possible while memories are fresh. Record the identity, position, and observations of all witnesses. In some jurisdictions, the national investigation body may request this evidence, so preservation is both a safety practice and a regulatory requirement.

Root Cause Analysis Techniques

Root cause analysis goes beyond identifying what happened to understand why it happened. Techniques applicable to drone incidents include the Five Whys method, bow-tie analysis, and fault tree analysis.

Most drone incidents have multiple contributing factors rather than a single cause. A loss of control event might involve equipment degradation, environmental conditions, pilot decision-making, and organisational factors such as maintenance schedule gaps. Effective investigation identifies all contributing factors to prevent recurrence.

Operators should focus on systemic causes rather than individual blame. System-level improvements such as better maintenance schedules, clearer procedures, or improved training prevent recurrence more effectively than disciplining individual operators.

Corrective Action Implementation

Investigation findings should lead to specific, measurable corrective actions. Track the implementation of corrective actions and verify their effectiveness through follow-up assessment. Share lessons learned within the organisation to prevent similar incidents across all operations.

Some corrective actions may require changes to procedures, equipment, or training that take time to implement. Establish interim risk mitigations while permanent corrections are being developed. Document all corrective actions and their implementation dates for regulatory compliance.

National Investigation Body Roles

Each country has a designated body responsible for investigating serious aviation incidents, including those involving drones. Understanding the role and authority of these bodies helps operators cooperate effectively during investigations.

The UK Air Accidents Investigation Branch investigates serious drone incidents. Germany's BFU handles significant aviation accidents. France's BEA-é covers drone incidents. The Netherlands' OVV and Sweden's SHK investigate accidents within their respective jurisdictions. Australia's ATSB has extensive published drone accident investigation reports that provide valuable learning materials. New Zealand's TAIC, Canada's TSB, and the US NTSB are the equivalents in their countries. Japan's JTSB handles significant aviation accidents including drone incidents.

These bodies investigate to improve safety rather than to attribute blame or establish regulatory non-compliance. Operators required to cooperate with national investigation body inquiries should do so fully and transparently. The investigation body's findings are typically published and contribute to industry-wide safety improvement.

Operators should not confuse the national investigation body process with regulatory enforcement actions. The investigation body and the aviation authority (such as the CAA, CASA, or FAA) may each have an interest in a significant incident, with different purposes: safety improvement versus regulatory compliance assessment.

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Near-Miss Investigation and Safety Culture

Near-miss events — incidents where an accident almost occurred — are among the most valuable sources of safety information. Most near-miss events are not reported to national authorities because they do not meet mandatory reporting thresholds. Operators who investigate near-misses internally with the same rigour as actual accidents identify and address risks before they escalate.

Creating a safety culture that encourages near-miss reporting requires removing barriers including fear of blame, administrative burden, and uncertainty about what to report. Organisations where pilots and support staff freely report near-misses consistently demonstrate better safety performance than those where such events go unrecorded.

Compliance Implementation Steps

  1. Designate an investigation lead who is trained in incident investigation methodology and is not the pilot in command for the incident being investigated. This separation reduces bias and ensures objective analysis.
  2. Preserve all digital evidence immediately after an incident: flight logs, telemetry, battery data, camera footage, and control link records. Record the evidence preservation date and who handled the data.
  3. Conduct witness interviews promptly while memories are accurate. Record the time, location, and observations of all witnesses including the pilot, visual observers, and any bystanders.
  4. Apply a structured root cause analysis method such as the Five Whys or fault tree analysis. Look beyond the immediate cause to identify contributing factors in equipment, environment, procedures, and organisation.
  5. Develop corrective actions that address root causes rather than symptoms. Assign responsibility for implementation, set completion deadlines, and verify effectiveness through follow-up assessment.
  6. File regulatory reports within the deadlines required by your national authority. Retain copies of all incident reports and investigation records for the period required by your country's record-keeping regulations.

10-Country Safety Regulation Comparison

Investigation Element UK DE FR NL SE AU NZ CA US JP
Investigation body AAIB/CAA BFU BEA-é OVV SHK ATSB TAIC TSB NTSB/FAA JTSB/MLIT
Operator investigation Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected Expected
Report deadline 24h for MOR 48h 48h 48h 48h 24h ASRS Immediate CAIR 24h TSB 10 days Part 107 Immediate MLIT
Evidence retention Required Required Required Required Required Required Required Required Required Required

Assess Your Drone Operation Risks

Use our free risk assessment tools to evaluate your drone operation safety across all 10 countries.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to investigate drone incidents myself?

While the national investigation body handles major incidents, operators are expected to conduct their own internal investigations for all incidents and near-misses. Internal investigation provides the most relevant safety learning for your specific operations and supports the continuous improvement expected by aviation authorities across all 10 countries. Near-miss investigation is particularly valuable because it identifies risks before they escalate to actual accidents.

How quickly must I report a drone incident?

Deadlines vary: the UK requires Mandatory Occurrence Reports within 24 hours, EU states require notification within 48 hours, Australia requires ASRS reporting within 24 hours, the US allows 10 days for Part 107 incidents, and Japan requires immediate MLIT notification. Keep the relevant contacts and reporting deadlines readily accessible in your emergency procedures documentation rather than having to look them up during a stressful post-incident period.

What evidence should I preserve after an incident?

Preserve all flight logs, telemetry data, battery data, control link logs, camera footage, and physical evidence from the drone. Record weather conditions and witness statements. Do not modify, repair, or update the drone firmware before completing the investigation, as these actions can overwrite or alter evidence that reveals the cause of the incident.

What is root cause analysis?

Root cause analysis is a systematic method for identifying the underlying causes of an incident rather than just the immediate symptoms. It looks beyond what happened to understand why it happened, addressing equipment, environmental, human, and organisational factors. Techniques such as the Five Whys, bow-tie analysis, and fault tree analysis are widely applicable to drone incident investigation and can be learned through aviation safety courses.

How do I prevent incident recurrence?

Implement corrective actions based on investigation findings, share lessons learned across the organisation, update procedures and training as needed, and verify the effectiveness of corrections through follow-up assessment. Tracking corrective action completion and checking that the changes have actually reduced risk is as important as developing the actions themselves — closed-loop verification confirms that the investigation process delivered real safety improvement.


This article provides general informational guidance about drone safety topics across 10 countries. Regulatory requirements change frequently. Always verify current rules with your national aviation authority: CAA (UK), LBA (DE), DGAC (FR), ILT (NL), Transportstyrelsen (SE), CASA (AU), CAA NZ (NZ), Transport Canada (CA), FAA (US), MLIT (JP). MmowW does not provide legal advice. Loved for Safety.

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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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