Obstacle avoidance is a fundamental safety requirement for drone operations in all 10 countries. Approaches range from pilot visual scanning to technology-assisted detection using sensors and AI. Regulatory frameworks set minimum separation standards while technology and procedures provide the means to achieve them.
Visual Line of Sight operations form the baseline for obstacle avoidance across all 10 countries. In VLOS, the pilot or visual observer maintains continuous visual contact with the drone, enabling real-time assessment of obstacles, terrain, and other airspace users.
Each country defines VLOS requirements slightly differently. The UK CAA requires pilots to maintain visual contact sufficient to control the drone and avoid collisions. EU member states define VLOS within the Open category operations. Australia specifies VLOS for standard (sub-25kg) operations. The US Part 107 requires VLOS with limited exceptions.
Pilots conducting VLOS operations should position themselves to maximise visibility of the operational area, account for sun glare and weather conditions that reduce visibility, and brief visual observers on their responsibilities.
Modern drones increasingly include obstacle avoidance sensors using ultrasonic, infrared, LiDAR, or stereo vision technology. These systems provide an additional safety layer but do not replace pilot responsibility for collision avoidance.
Regulatory frameworks across all 10 countries treat technology-assisted avoidance as a supplementary measure. No country currently allows operators to rely solely on automated obstacle avoidance for standard operations. For BVLOS operations, detect and avoid technology is required as part of the safety case or risk assessment in all jurisdictions.
Operators should understand the limitations of their drone's obstacle avoidance system, including detection range, field of view gaps, performance in different lighting conditions, and inability to detect thin obstacles like power lines.
Thorough pre-flight assessment of the operational environment prevents many obstacle-related incidents. Survey the operational area for structures, power lines, trees, cranes, and other obstacles. Check NOTAMs for temporary obstacles such as construction cranes or aerial work.
Use official aeronautical information sources for your country: OS maps and NATS NOTAMs in the UK, AIP and NOTAM services in EU states, NAIPS in Australia, Airshare in New Zealand, CFS in Canada, and FISS in Japan. Digital terrain and obstacle databases can supplement visual surveys.
Briefing all team members on identified obstacles and establishing minimum clearance distances as part of the flight plan reduces the risk of obstacle collisions during operations.
Minimum separation distances from people, structures, and other aircraft vary by country. The UK specifies 50m from uninvolved persons for standard operations (reduced for A2 operations). EU states define distances by subcategory within the Open category. Australia and Japan specify 30m from people for standard operations.
These are minimum distances. Operators should apply additional separation margins based on drone speed, wind conditions, pilot experience, and the specific obstacle environment. Greater separation provides more time and space to react to unexpected events.
Power lines represent a disproportionate obstacle collision risk relative to their size. Thin cables are difficult to detect visually and may not appear on all obstacle databases. A collision with a power line can destroy the aircraft, interrupt electricity supply to homes and businesses, and create serious safety risks including electrical fires.
Best practice for power line management includes: identifying all power line crossings during pre-flight survey, increasing minimum clearance distances above those specified for solid structures, avoiding flights below power line height in areas with known line crossings, and never flying toward a power line unless you are certain of clearance above.
In the UK, the National Grid publishes overhead line data. In Australia, local distribution networks can provide line height information for specific sections. The FAA publishes transmission line obstacle data in the US. Many countries include major transmission lines in aeronautical obstruction databases, but distribution-level lines are often absent from these sources and require ground-level survey to identify.
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Try it free →Beyond Visual Line of Sight operations remove the pilot's direct visual reference for obstacle detection, making technology-based detect-and-avoid systems essential. All 10 countries that are actively developing BVLOS operational frameworks require operators to demonstrate how they will detect and avoid both cooperative (transponder-equipped) and non-cooperative (no transponder) aircraft and obstacles.
The UK CAA's PDRA01 standard provides a framework for lower-risk BVLOS operations. EASA SORA 2.5 specifies requirements for BVLOS within the Specific category. The FAA is developing Part 108 regulations specifically for BVLOS operations. Australia's CASA, Canada's Transport Canada, New Zealand's CAA NZ, and Japan's MLIT each have BVLOS trial and approval frameworks that are evolving rapidly.
DAA technology options include onboard detection systems using cameras, radar, or ADS-B receivers, as well as ground-based monitoring infrastructure. The appropriate solution depends on the operational environment — different technology suits dense urban corridors versus open rural terrain.
| Obstacle Avoidance | UK | DE | FR | NL | SE | AU | NZ | CA | US | JP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VLOS requirement | Maintain at all times | VLOS mandatory (Open) | VLOS mandatory (Open) | VLOS mandatory (Open) | VLOS mandatory (Open) | VLOS for standard | VLOS Part 101 | VLOS Basic/Advanced | VLOS Part 107 | VLOS standard ops |
| Min. distance people | 50m (unless A2) | Varied by subcategory | Varied by subcategory | Varied by subcategory | Varied by subcategory | 30m standard | No specific min. | 30m horizontal | No specific (Part 107) | 30m from people |
| DAA for BVLOS | Required (PDRA01) | SORA requirement | SORA requirement | SORA requirement | SORA requirement | Safety case | Safety case | SFOC/RPOC condition | Part 108 developing | Cat. III requirement |
| Obstacle data | OS maps + NOTAM | AIP + NOTAM | AIP + NOTAM | AIP + NOTAM | AIP + NOTAM | NAIPS + NOTAM | AIP + Airshare | CFS + NOTAM | Charts + NOTAM | AIP + FISS |
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Obstacle avoidance technology is not universally required for VLOS operations but is typically required for BVLOS operations in all 10 countries. All countries expect pilots to avoid obstacles through visual observation as a minimum during VLOS operations. Technology provides an additional safety layer but does not transfer the pilot's responsibility for collision avoidance. For BVLOS operations, operators must demonstrate a specific DAA solution as part of their safety case or operational approval.
Minimum distances vary by country and operational category. The UK specifies 50m from uninvolved persons, while Australia and Japan specify 30m. EU member states apply distances defined by subcategory within the Open category framework. General best practice is to apply additional margins above regulatory minimums for challenging environments, higher-speed aircraft, or unfamiliar locations.
Obstacle avoidance sensors are supplementary safety systems, not a substitute for pilot vigilance. Understand the limitations of your system including detection range, field of view gaps, and performance in different lighting and weather conditions. No country allows sole reliance on automated avoidance for standard VLOS operations. Power lines and thin wires are particularly challenging for sensor-based detection systems and require extra vigilance during visual inspection.
Survey the operational area visually during daylight even for night operations, check NOTAMs for temporary obstacles such as construction cranes, review aeronautical charts and obstacle databases including national power line data sources, identify power lines and other thin obstacles that may not appear in digital databases, and brief all team members on obstacle locations and minimum clearance distances.
Land safely if possible without risking further damage or injury, assess any damage to persons, property, or the aircraft, and preserve evidence including flight logs and imagery. Report to your national aviation authority within the required timeframe, and contact your insurance provider promptly. Investigate the root cause to determine whether pre-flight survey procedures, clearance distances, or flight planning should be adjusted to prevent recurrence.
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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