Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: I've heard drones have "geofencing" that prevents them from flying into certain areas. How does this work and does the CAA require it?

:::

Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: Excellent question. Geofencing is a critical safety technology that creates invisible boundaries around restricted airspace. The CAA doesn't mandate it for all operations, but it's strongly recommended and required for some specialized work. Let me explain how it works and when you need it.

:::

What is Geofencing?

Geofencing is an automated system that prevents your drone from flying into restricted airspace by creating an invisible virtual boundary.

Geofencing Best Practices

Pre-Flight Geofence Verification:

Step Action
1. Check map display Review geofence zones on ground control station
2. Planned flight path Ensure geofence allows all intended maneuvers
3. Geofence boundaries Verify lateral and altitude limits visible on screen
4. Battery time Ensure flight plan completes before batteries depleted (can't override geofence to extend)
5. Test in open area Brief test flight to confirm geofence response before critical operations
6. Unlocks verified If unlocks requested, confirm they're active in aircraft before flight

Geofence Maintenance:

Task Frequency
Cloud database sync Daily (verify latest geofence zones)
Regional updates Weekly (check for new TFRs, restrictions)
CAA site review Monthly (check for changes to local airspace)
Firmware updates As released (includes geofence improvements)

Crew Training:

All crew must understand geofencing:

  • How to identify geofence boundaries on display
  • How aircraft responds when approaching boundary
  • When geofence overrides are authorized (and how to request)
  • Proper response to geofence alerts (abort, land, replan)
  • Incident reporting if geofence prevents authorized flight

Geofencing in Safety Management Systems (SMS)

For Part 102 operations, geofencing is a key SMS component:

SMS Documentation:

Section: Geofence Policy

`

  1. GEOFENCE MANDATE

  • All commercial flights require active geofencing
  • Aircraft not permitted to operate without functional geofence
  • Pre-flight verification required (geofence test prior to launch)

  1. GEOFENCE VERIFICATION

  • Pilot confirms geofence zones loaded before takeoff
  • Display check shows correct restrictions
  • Geofence functionality tested in safe area

  1. GEOFENCE UNLOCKS

  • Unlocks requested only for CAA-authorized operations
  • Unlock requests routed through manufacturer (DJI, etc.)
  • Unlocks verified active before flight
  • All unlock attempts logged with date, reason, approval

  1. GEOFENCE VIOLATIONS

  • Aircraft response documented (alert, hover, land)
  • Incident report filed
  • Root cause analysis (GPS failure? Unauthorized unlock attempt?)
  • Corrective action implemented

  1. PILOT TRAINING

  • All pilots trained on geofence functionality
  • Annual refresher on geofence procedures
  • Training documented in crew file
``

How MmowW Helps with Geofence Compliance

MmowW NZ's geofence management platform provides:

  • Airspace database – Current NZ restricted airspace, TFRs, dynamic restrictions
  • Geofence zone mapping – Visual display of your approved operating area
  • Pre-flight geofence verification – Checklist to confirm geofence is active and correct
  • Unlock request tracking – Document all geofence override requests and approvals
  • Incident logging – Record geofence violations or near-misses
  • Crew training verification – Track geofence training for all pilots
  • SMS documentation – Geofence procedures integrated into safety management system
  • Real-time TFR alerts – Notification of new temporary flight restrictions

FAQ: Geofencing Drones

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: What happens if GPS fails and the geofence can't determine position?

:::

Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: If GPS is lost, the aircraft usually enters a failsafe mode—it may hover in place, slowly descend, or land automatically depending on your programmed settings. The geofence system cannot function without GPS position, so it defaults to conservative safety behavior. You should land the aircraft manually or allow the failsafe to complete. Never continue flying without GPS if you're near restricted airspace.

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: Can I request a custom geofence for my specific flight area?

:::

Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: Yes, but it's a formal process. If your CAA airspace approval specifies a particular flying area, you can request a custom geofence from the aircraft manufacturer (DJI, Auterion, etc.). Provide your CAA authorization document, the exact coordinates, and altitude limits. The manufacturer typically processes custom geofence requests in 1-2 business days.

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: Is geofencing required for Part 101 operations?

:::

Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: It's recommended but not universally required for Part 101. However, if your airspace approval specifies certain restrictions, you'll need geofencing to ensure compliance. For Part 102 operations, geofencing is strongly recommended and often required by insurance companies. Check your CAA approval and insurance policy for specific requirements.

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: Can I completely disable geofencing on my DJI drone?

:::

Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: Informational geofence levels can be disabled. But mandatory zones (near airports) cannot be bypassed. Attempting to disable mandatory geofencing or modifying firmware to override restrictions is illegal and voids your insurance. If a geofence is preventing legitimate operations, request a formal unlock through DJI with your CAA authorization.

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: How often should I update my geofence zones?

:::

Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: Enable automatic cloud updates on your aircraft (DJI, Auterion, etc.). The system will sync the latest geofence zones when you connect to Wi-Fi. Before critical operations, manually check the airspace database one more time to ensure you have current TFRs and restrictions. Weekly geofence updates are sufficient for ongoing operations.

Conclusion

Geofencing is a passive safety system that prevents unauthorized flight into restricted airspace. While not universally mandatory, it's a best practice for all commercial operations and required for many specialized applications.

Key points:
  • Automated safety – Geofence prevents entry into hazardous airspace without pilot intervention
  • Multiple restriction types – Altitude caps, lateral boundaries, exclusion zones
  • CAA integration – Pre-loaded zones near airports, military areas, critical infrastructure
  • Override capability – Authorized operations can request custom geofences through proper channels
  • GPS-dependent – System relies on accurate positioning; failures require manual pilot control
  • SMS requirement – Part 102 operations must document geofence policies and training

Ready to ensure your drone operations stay within safe airspace boundaries? MmowW NZ automates geofence verification, airspace mapping, and compliance documentation. Start at NZ$8.60/drone/month.
Update History
  • — Initial publication
🔍 Regulation last verified: Source: CAA NZ Official

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always verify current regulations with Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand (CAA NZ) before operating your drone.

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