Comparing Drone Permit Rules in New York City and Paris (2026)
Quick Answer: New York City and Paris both use a two-layer model. NYC needs an NYPD permit ($150, $2M/$4M insurance, 30 days ahead) plus FAA rules. Paris follows the France/EASA framework — Open and Specific categories — and central Paris is largely a strict no-fly zone. Flying in NYC is legal but requires NYPD authorization; verify the current France/EASA rules with the relevant authorities.
Comparing New York and Paris means comparing the US federal-plus-city model with the European EASA framework as applied in France. Both cap their dense cores with heavy restrictions. This comparison states NYC precisely and describes the French framework at the framework level only.
The Universal Pattern: Two Layers Everywhere
The most useful thing to understand about comparing cities is that nearly every jurisdiction uses the same basic structure: a national (or federal) aviation layer set by the country's civil aviation authority, plus a local layer of city, park, or regional rules and permissions. New York City is a clear example — the FAA sets the federal rules and the NYPD issues the city permit. When you fly in any city, identify both layers and satisfy both. The details below describe NYC precisely from primary sources; for the comparison city, they describe the general framework only. Always verify the current local rules with the relevant authority before you fly anywhere.
New York City (Precise)
- Federal layer (FAA): Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate, aircraft registration and Remote ID under Part 89 for drones 0.55 lb (250 g) or heavier, and LAANC or DroneZone airspace authorization — all five boroughs lie under Class B airspace, and much of Manhattan has a 0 ft LAANC ceiling.
- City layer (NYPD): An Unmanned Aircraft permit is required under Administrative Code § 10-126; applications go through dronepermits.nypdonline.org, cost $150, and must be filed 30 days ahead (14 for qualifying repeat applicants) under 38 RCNY Chapter 24.
- Insurance: $2,000,000 per occurrence / $4,000,000 aggregate, naming the City of New York as Additional Insured.
- Notice: Community-board notification and 100 ft physical postings when imagery is captured.
- Bottom line: Flying in NYC is legal but requires both federal and city authorization.
Paris (General Framework)
- National/EU layer (France & EASA): France applies the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) framework, which organizes drone flight into the Open and Specific categories based on risk, with registration and competence requirements that scale with the category and the drone.
- Central Paris restrictions: Central Paris is largely a strict no-fly area for drones, with extensive restricted airspace over the city. Recreational and commercial flight in the urban core is heavily limited.
- Verify locally: Confirm the current EASA and French national requirements, and the specific Paris restricted zones, with the relevant French aviation authority. We do not state specific French fees or figures here.
Key Takeaways
Both cities make their cores difficult to fly in — Manhattan through a 0 ft LAANC ceiling plus the NYPD permit, central Paris through extensive no-fly restrictions under the EASA framework. The structural difference is that NYC layers a specific city permit on the US federal system, while Paris operates within the EU's risk-based category system administered by France. In both, confirm current rules before flying. Flying in NYC is legal but requires the NYPD permit; for Paris, verify the current France/EASA rules directly.
Why Both Layers, Every Time
It is tempting to treat the NYPD permit and FAA authorization as alternatives, but they answer different questions. The FAA controls the national airspace — whether the air over a location is safe and authorized for a drone at a given altitude. The City of New York controls take-off and landing on the ground within its limits under § 10-126. Satisfying one does not satisfy the other: a perfectly valid LAANC authorization still leaves you without a lawful place to launch or land in NYC, and a valid NYPD permit does not grant you the airspace. Build your plan around both from the start, because the slowest layer — often a manual DroneZone authorization where the LAANC ceiling is 0 ft — sets your real timeline.
Operating without the required authorization is what carries consequences. Unauthorized take-off or landing can result in civil penalties under 38 RCNY § 24-07 and criminal exposure under § 10-126(c), and reckless operation can lead to arrest. At the federal level, the FAA can impose civil penalties up to $75,000 per violation under 49 U.S.C. § 46301. None of this makes flying in New York City unlawful in itself — it remains legal — but it makes doing it without authorization a poor decision. The whole point of the permit pathway the NYPD opened on July 21, 2023 is to give operators a lawful route, and using that route is far cheaper than the alternative.
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