Every drone insurance policy contains exclusions — specific situations, activities, and circumstances that are not covered. Understanding these exclusions before an incident occurs is critical because discovering a coverage gap after filing a claim is too late. This guide examines the most common exclusions found in drone insurance policies across 10 major markets and explains how operators can manage these gaps.
Insurance exclusions serve several purposes. They limit the insurer's exposure to risks that are unpredictable, uninsurable, or disproportionately expensive. They encourage safe behaviour by making operators financially responsible for reckless actions. They keep premiums affordable by excluding low-probability but high-severity scenarios that would dramatically increase costs for all policyholders.
For drone operators, exclusions define the boundary between covered operations and uninsured risk. Operating outside this boundary — even unknowingly — can void an entire claim.
| Exclusion Type | UK | DE | FR | NL | SE | AU | NZ | CA | US | JP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BVLOS (unless endorsed) | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common |
| Night ops (unless endorsed) | Common | Less common | Less common | Less common | Less common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common |
| Flights over crowds | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common |
| War and terrorism | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal |
| Intentional acts | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal |
| Wear and tear | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal |
| Regulatory non-compliance | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal | Universal |
| Unapproved modifications | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common | Common |
Standard drone insurance policies almost universally exclude BVLOS operations unless specifically endorsed. BVLOS flights carry significantly higher risk due to the pilot's inability to visually detect obstacles, other aircraft, and people.
Impact: Any claim arising during a BVLOS operation will be denied under a standard VLOS-only policy. Operators performing or planning BVLOS work must request and pay for a BVLOS endorsement.
Operating in violation of aviation regulations voids insurance coverage. Common violations include flying without required registration, operating without proper qualifications, entering restricted airspace without authorisation, and flying above maximum permitted altitude.
Impact: If an investigation reveals that the operator was violating any regulation at the time of the incident, the insurer will deny the claim regardless of whether the violation caused the incident.
Every drone insurance policy excludes damage caused by or occurring during acts of war, terrorism, insurrection, or civil unrest. Separate war risk coverage exists but is extremely expensive and typically only relevant for operators working in conflict zones.
Insurance does not cover damage caused intentionally or through grossly reckless behaviour. Operating a drone while impaired, deliberately flying into an obstruction, or ignoring obvious weather hazards could be classified as reckless behaviour.
Gradual deterioration of equipment through normal use is not insurable. Battery capacity degradation, motor bearing wear, and propeller fatigue are maintenance issues, not insurance events. However, if worn equipment causes a sudden failure during flight leading to a crash, the crash damage is typically covered — the distinction is between the failure itself (excluded) and the resulting damage (covered).
Installing aftermarket components, modified firmware, or custom hardware without notifying the insurer can void coverage. Insurers assess risk based on the aircraft's standard configuration. Modifications change the risk profile, and undisclosed changes mean the insurer priced the risk incorrectly.
Most policies specify geographic coverage. A UK policy may cover operations within the UK and EU but exclude operations in the US, Australia, or other non-EU countries. Flying outside the covered geographic area voids coverage for that flight.
Policies typically specify the maximum takeoff weight and operating altitude covered. Flying a heavier drone than declared or exceeding the altitude specified in the policy creates a coverage gap.
Some policies exclude certain types of payloads. Hazardous materials, delivery payloads, and military or law enforcement equipment may be specifically excluded. Changing payloads without notifying the insurer can also create issues if the new payload changes the risk profile.
Losses caused by cyberattack, electronic jamming, GPS spoofing, or intentional signal interference are increasingly excluded from standard drone policies. As drone technology becomes more connected and autonomous, cyber risk exclusions are becoming more common.
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Try it free →Read the policy before you buy — The single most effective strategy. Understanding exclusions at purchase allows operators to either select a policy with fewer exclusions, request specific endorsements, or adjust operations to remain within coverage.
Request endorsements — Many exclusions can be removed by purchasing specific endorsements. BVLOS coverage, night operations, extended geographic scope, and specific payload coverage are commonly available as add-ons.
Disclose everything — Notify the insurer about all equipment, modifications, operational types, and operating locations. Undisclosed information is the most common basis for denied claims.
Review annually — As operations evolve, new exclusions may become relevant. An annual policy review ensures coverage keeps pace with the business.
Maintain regulatory compliance — The regulatory non-compliance exclusion is universal and absolute. Maintaining current registrations, qualifications, and operational authorisations is the foundation of insurance coverage.
Watch for these phrases in policy documents that indicate potentially problematic exclusions:
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The regulatory non-compliance exclusion is the most dangerous because it is universal and absolute. Any regulatory violation at the time of an incident — even one unrelated to the incident — can void the entire claim. Maintaining current registrations, qualifications, and authorisations is essential.
Many exclusions can be removed by purchasing endorsements. BVLOS coverage, night operations, and extended geographic scope are commonly available. However, some exclusions (war, terrorism, intentional acts, regulatory non-compliance) are permanent and cannot be removed.
If your policy excludes night operations and you are flying at night when an incident occurs, the claim will likely be denied. In EU/UK jurisdictions, night operations in the Open Category are permitted under certain conditions, but the insurance policy must also permit them. Request a night operations endorsement if you fly after dark.
Changing payloads or adding equipment without notification can void hull coverage and potentially affect liability coverage. The insurer assessed risk based on the declared configuration. Always notify your insurer when changing equipment, especially if the new payload is heavier or changes the drone's flight characteristics.
No. Drone delivery operations are typically excluded from standard commercial drone insurance policies. Delivery operations introduce unique risks including payload release mechanisms, operations over populated areas, and higher flight frequency. Specialist delivery drone coverage is available from select insurers.
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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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