Flying a Drone at Jacob Riis Park Beach: NYC Rules & Authorization (2026)

Quick Answer: No — Jacob Riis Park beach is part of Gateway National Recreation Area, where the National Park Service generally prohibits launching and landing drones. It also sits near JFK's Class B airspace with low or 0 ft AGL LAANC ceilings, and any NYC take-off or landing requires an NYPD permit under § 10-126.

Jacob Riis Park — "Riis Beach" — is a wide ocean beach on the Rockaway Peninsula in Queens. Its open sand and Atlantic horizon look ideal for drone footage, but its federal status and airport proximity make it one of the clearer no-fly answers in the borough.

Part of a Federal Park

Jacob Riis Park is part of Gateway National Recreation Area, managed by the National Park Service (NPS). Under NPS policy, launching, landing, or operating drones from park lands and waters is generally prohibited. That federal restriction applies regardless of city permitting.

Rockaway Airspace and JFK Proximity

The Rockaway Peninsula sits close to JFK International Airport and its Class B airspace. LAANC grid ceilings in this coastal corridor are commonly low or 0 ft AGL, so no automated FAA authorization is available, and a manual FAA DroneZone authorization would generally be required for any nearby flight.

The Two Layers of Drone Law You Must Clear

Flying a drone anywhere in New York City means satisfying two separate legal systems at the same time. Clearing one without the other does not make you compliant.

The honest framing: flying in NYC is legal but requires authorization. It is not banned outright — it is unlawful to take off or land without the proper NYPD authorization (and FAA authorization in controlled airspace).

The NYPD Permit Requirement

The lawful pathway is the NYPD Unmanned Aircraft (UA) Take-off/Landing Permit, applied for at dronepermits.nypdonline.org (reachable via NYC.gov/DronePermits, live since July 21, 2023). Key requirements under 38 RCNY Chapter 24:

Your Legal Options

If you want to operate here lawfully, the realistic paths are:

  1. Apply for the NYPD UA permit, securing Part 107 certification, $2M/$4M insurance, and any required FAA airspace authorization first.
  2. Use one of the five designated model aircraft fields for recreational flying outside a park ban.
  3. Fly outside city limits in uncontrolled (Class G) airspace where no NYPD permit is required and no park or airport restriction applies.
Primary sources: NYC Admin. Code § 10-126 · 38 RCNY Chapter 24 · 14 CFR Part 107 · National Park Service drone policy (Gateway NRA) · NYPD Drone Permits Portal (dronepermits.nypdonline.org).
Disclaimer: This guide is provided for general information and compliance reference only and is not legal advice. Rules, fees, and authorization requirements change without notice. Always verify current requirements directly with the NYPD at dronepermits.nypdonline.org, NYC Parks, and the FAA before you fly.

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