AIO Answer: Drone pilot license requirements vary significantly across countries. The US requires a Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate (approximately $175 exam). EU states (DE, FR, NL, SE) require EASA competency certificates — A1/A3 online (approximately EUR 25) or A2 proctored exam (EUR 230-920). The UK requires Flyer ID (free) and Operator ID (GBP 10.33/year) for Open category. Australia requires a RePL for ReOC operations. Japan introduced First and Second Class UAS Pilot Certificates in December 2022. Canada requires Basic or Advanced certificates. New Zealand uniquely allows commercial flight under Part 101 without certification.
The global drone industry uses different terminology for pilot credentials: licenses, certificates, certifications, competency certificates, and qualifications. Despite the different names, all serve the same purpose — demonstrating that a pilot has the knowledge and skills to operate a drone safely and in compliance with national regulations.
This guide compares pilot credentialing systems across all 10 countries where MmowW operates, helping you understand what you need, how to get it, and what it costs.
| Country | Open Category | Commercial (Specific) | Cost | Validity | Knowledge Test | Practical Test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK | Flyer ID (free) + Operator ID (GBP 10.33/yr) | Per OA requirements | Free-GBP 524 | Flyer ID: 5 yr / OA: annual | Online theory | Not for Open |
| DE | A1/A3 online (EUR 25) | A2 CofC (EUR 230-920) | EUR 25-920 | 5 years | Online + proctored | Not standard |
| FR | A1/A3 online (EUR 25) | A2 CofC (EUR 230-920) | EUR 25-920 | 5 years | Online + proctored | Not standard |
| NL | A1/A3 online (EUR 25) | A2 CofC + OA | EUR 25-920+ | 5 years | Online + proctored | Per OA |
| SE | A1/A3 online (EUR 25) | A2 CofC + OA | EUR 25-920+ | 5 years | Online + proctored | Per OA |
| AU | No cert needed (Open) | RePL for ReOC ops | AU$1,500-3,000 | 2 years | Theory exam | Practical flight test |
| NZ | None required | Part 102 (organization) | Minimal | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| CA | Basic cert (online test) | Advanced cert | CA$10 exam fee | Ongoing (knowledge) | Online | Flight review (Advanced) |
| US | Part 107 | Part 107 (same cert) | ~$175 exam | 24 months (recurrent) | Proctored at test center | Not required |
| JP | None (Open equiv) | 1st/2nd Class UAS Cert | JPY 16,500-30,000+ | 3 years | Theory exam | Practical skills test |
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Try it free →The US system is straightforward: one certificate covers all commercial operations under Part 107. The initial knowledge test is taken at an FAA-approved testing center (approximately $175 fee). The test covers airspace, weather, regulations, operations, and emergency procedures across 60 multiple-choice questions. A score of 70% or higher is required.
Recurrent testing is required every 24 months and is available as a free online course through the FAA Safety website. There is no practical flight test requirement. The certificate is valid indefinitely but recurrent testing must be current for legal operation. Waivers for operations beyond standard Part 107 (night, BVLOS, over people) are separate from the certificate.
The UK has a multi-tier credentialing system:
EASA provides the common framework, implemented by national authorities:
National variations exist in exam providers, pricing, and additional national requirements. Germany's LBA, France's DGAC, Netherlands' ILT, and Sweden's Transportstyrelsen each manage their national implementation.
Australia's system for commercial operations is among the most rigorous:
Registration costs AU$40 per year for aircraft over 500g. Penalties for operating without required credentials can reach AU$16,500 per offence.
Japan introduced a formal pilot certification system in December 2022:
Both certificates require training at registered institutions. Costs range from JPY 16,500 for examination fees to JPY 200,000+ including institutional training. Valid for 3 years with renewal examination. Registration of each aircraft costs JPY 900-1,450 through DIPS 2.0.
Transport Canada's system uses two certificate levels:
Registration costs CA$5 per aircraft for 3 years. The RPOC framework (from November 2025) introduces additional pathways for experienced operators.
New Zealand is unique among the 10 countries: no individual pilot certification is required for commercial drone operations under Part 101. Operators must comply with the rules (altitude limits, distance from people, airspace coordination) but do not need to pass a knowledge test or obtain a license. Part 102 certification is an organizational certificate for operations beyond Part 101 limitations. This approach makes New Zealand the easiest country to enter the commercial drone market from a credentialing perspective.
New Zealand has the simplest path — no individual pilot certification is required for commercial operations under Part 101. The US is next, requiring only a single knowledge test (Part 107, approximately $175) with no practical flight test. Canada's Basic certificate involves an online knowledge test at CA$10. The most complex paths are Australia (RePL with practical flight test, AU$1,500-3,000+) and Japan (First/Second Class certificates with theory and practical examination).
No country currently offers automatic mutual recognition of drone pilot credentials. Each country requires compliance with its own certification system. Some countries may accept foreign credentials as partial credit toward their own requirements, but you must verify this with the specific national authority. The EU's EASA system provides mutual recognition among member states — an A2 CofC from Germany is valid in France.
Timelines vary dramatically. US Part 107 can be obtained in 1-2 weeks (study and schedule exam). UK Flyer ID takes about 30 minutes online. EU A1/A3 takes 1-2 hours online. Australia's RePL typically requires 5-10 days of training plus examination. Japan's UAS Pilot Certificate requires 10-30+ hours of institutional training. Plan your timeline based on the specific country where you intend to operate.
Requirements vary. The US Part 107 test is available in English only. EU A1/A3 tests are available in each member state's language. The UK test is in English. Australia's RePL training is in English. Japan's examinations are primarily in Japanese, though some registered institutions may offer English materials. Canada offers tests in English and French. Language requirements can be a significant barrier for international operators.
In the US, you must complete recurrent testing (free online) every 24 months to exercise Part 107 privileges — the certificate itself does not expire. In the EU, A1/A3 and A2 certificates expire after 5 years and must be renewed through re-examination. Australia's RePL must be renewed every 2 years with demonstrated currency. Japan's certificates expire after 3 years with renewal examination. Flying with expired credentials is a regulatory violation in all countries.
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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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🇬🇧 UK | 🇩🇪 DE | 🇫🇷 FR | 🇳🇱 NL | 🇸🇪 SE | 🇦🇺 AU | 🇳🇿 NZ | 🇨🇦 CA | 🇺🇸 US | 🇯🇵 JP
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