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

Drone Incident Reporting Requirements

TS行政書士
Supervisado por Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Escribano Administrativo Autorizado, JapónTodo el contenido de MmowW está supervisado por un experto en cumplimiento normativo con licencia nacional.
Learn drone incident reporting requirements across 10 countries. Understand deadlines, required information, and regulatory authority contacts for compliance. Incident reporting serves multiple functions. For aviation authorities, it provides safety data that drives regulatory improvements and identifies systemic risks. For operators, timely and accurate reporting protects against regulatory penalties, supports insurance claims, and demonstrates professional accountability.
Table of Contents
  1. Why Incident Reporting Matters
  2. 10-Country Incident Reporting Comparison
  3. Reportable Events by Category
  4. Country-Specific Reporting Procedures
  5. United Kingdom
  6. Germany
  7. United States
  8. Australia
  9. Information Required in Reports
  10. Incident Reporting and Insurance Claims
  11. Step-by-Step Incident Response Procedure
  12. Free Drone Compliance Tools
  13. FAQ
  14. How quickly must I report a drone incident?
  15. What happens if I do not report a drone incident?
  16. Do I need to report a near-miss with a bird?
  17. Is a flyaway (loss of control) a reportable incident?
  18. Can reporting an incident affect my operating permissions?

Drone Incident Reporting Requirements

Every country with a mature drone regulatory framework requires operators to report certain incidents to aviation authorities. Failure to report can result in regulatory penalties, criminal charges, and voided insurance coverage. The reporting requirements, deadlines, and definitions of reportable incidents vary significantly across the world's major drone markets.

Why Incident Reporting Matters

Incident reporting serves multiple functions. For aviation authorities, it provides safety data that drives regulatory improvements and identifies systemic risks. For operators, timely and accurate reporting protects against regulatory penalties, supports insurance claims, and demonstrates professional accountability.

The consequences of failing to report are substantial. In the UK, failure to report a mandatory occurrence can result in prosecution. In Australia, the ATSB has powers to compel reporting, and non-compliance is a criminal offence.

10-Country Incident Reporting Comparison

Aspect UK DE FR NL SE AU NZ CA US JP
Reporting authority CAA MOR LBA/BFU BEA/DGAC ILT/DSB TST/SHK ATSB + CASA TAIC + CAA TSB FAA + NTSB MLIT/JTSB
Report deadline Without delay Immediately Immediately Without delay Without delay Immediately Immediately Immediately 10 days (FAA) Immediately
Online reporting Yes (MOR system) Yes (LBA portal) Yes (BEA portal) Yes (ILT system) Yes (TST system) Yes (ATSB portal) Yes (TAIC) Yes (TSB) Yes (DRS portal) Yes (MLIT)
Injury reportable Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Property damage Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes (>$500) Yes
Near-miss manned aircraft Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Flyaway/loss of control Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Recommended Yes

Reportable Events by Category

Category 1 — Always reportable in all countries:

Category 2 — Reportable in most countries:

Category 3 — Reportable in some countries:

Country-Specific Reporting Procedures

United Kingdom

The UK uses the Mandatory Occurrence Reporting (MOR) system administered by the CAA. Reports must be submitted without delay — meaning as soon as practicable after the event. The system accepts online submissions through the CAA website.

Reportable events include any incident or occurrence that endangers or could endanger the safety of the aircraft, its occupants, or any other person. For drone operations, this includes near-misses with manned aircraft, loss of control, and any incident resulting in injury or property damage.

Germany

Germany requires immediate reporting to the LBA (Luftfahrt-Bundesamt) for incidents and to the BFU (Bundesstelle fur Flugunfalluntersuchung) for serious incidents and accidents. Reports can be submitted electronically through the LBA portal.

Under StGB §315, failing to report an aviation incident that caused harm can constitute a separate criminal offence. Germany takes aviation incident reporting particularly seriously.

United States

The FAA requires reporting within 10 calendar days for any incident involving serious injury to any person or damage to property exceeding $500 (14 CFR 107.9). Reports are submitted through the FAA Drone Response System (DRS).

Incidents involving manned aircraft must also be reported to the NTSB. The 10-day window is notably longer than the immediate reporting required in most other countries.

Australia

Australia has the most comprehensive reporting framework. Operators must report immediately to the ATSB for transport safety investigation purposes and to CASA for regulatory compliance purposes. The ATSB has statutory powers to compel reporting and can prosecute non-compliance.

Australia also requires retention of incident-related records for 7 years — the longest retention requirement among the 10 countries.

Information Required in Reports

Regardless of country, incident reports typically require:

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Incident Reporting and Insurance Claims

Incident reporting and insurance claims are closely linked. Insurance companies expect operators to report incidents to the relevant authorities as part of regulatory compliance. An insurer may deny a claim if the operator failed to file the required report, arguing that the failure demonstrates non-compliance with aviation regulations.

Conversely, a properly filed incident report creates an official record that supports the insurance claim timeline. The report demonstrates that the operator followed correct procedures and provides independent documentation of the event.

Operators should report to the aviation authority and the insurer simultaneously. The aviation authority report fulfils the regulatory obligation, while the insurer notification begins the claims process.

Step-by-Step Incident Response Procedure

  1. Ensure safety — Address any immediate safety concerns and provide aid to injured persons
  2. Secure the scene — Preserve the drone and any wreckage if safe to do so
  3. Document everything — Photograph the scene, record GPS coordinates, note weather conditions
  4. Preserve flight data — Download and back up all flight logs, telemetry, and camera footage
  5. Report to authority — File the required report with the national aviation authority
  6. Contact police — File a police report if injury or significant property damage occurred
  7. Notify insurer — Contact the insurance company with initial incident details
  8. Collect witness information — Record names and contact details of any witnesses
  9. Prepare detailed statement — Write a comprehensive account while events are fresh
  10. Follow up — Respond promptly to any requests for additional information

Free Drone Compliance Tools

Check your drone compliance status with MmowW's free tools:

UK Risk Checker | DE | FR | NL | SE | AU | NZ | CA | US

FAQ

How quickly must I report a drone incident?

In the UK, Germany, France, Netherlands, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Japan, incidents must be reported immediately or without delay. The United States allows 10 calendar days for FAA reporting under 14 CFR 107.9. Report as soon as practicable in all cases.

What happens if I do not report a drone incident?

Failure to report can result in regulatory penalties, criminal prosecution (particularly in Germany and Australia), and may give your insurer grounds to deny any related claim. In the UK, failure to file a Mandatory Occurrence Report can lead to prosecution.

Do I need to report a near-miss with a bird?

Bird strikes and near-misses with birds are generally not reportable unless they result in injury, property damage, or loss of control. Near-misses with manned aircraft are always reportable in all 10 countries.

Is a flyaway (loss of control) a reportable incident?

In most countries, yes. Loss of control that results in the drone departing the planned operating area is reportable in the UK, Germany, France, Netherlands, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Japan. In the US, it is recommended but only mandatory if it results in injury or property damage exceeding $500.

Can reporting an incident affect my operating permissions?

Reporting an incident does not automatically result in enforcement action. Aviation authorities distinguish between reporting (which is encouraged) and enforcement (which targets non-compliance). However, if the investigation reveals regulatory violations, enforcement action may follow.


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.

Free Drone Compliance Tools

Check your drone compliance with MmowW's free tools:

🇬🇧 UK | 🇩🇪 DE | 🇫🇷 FR | 🇳🇱 NL | 🇸🇪 SE | 🇦🇺 AU | 🇳🇿 NZ | 🇨🇦 CA | 🇺🇸 US | 🇯🇵 JP

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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