Around 2019, something shifted in the real estate market. A listing agent in Phoenix told me she lost a $680,000 property to a competitor who'd brought in aerial shots. The seller wanted those overhead images everyone else was getting. That conversation repeats itself across industries now.
Construction site managers text their drone operators asking for Thursday flyovers. Wedding couples scroll past photographers without aerial portfolios. Commercial property managers won't approve marketing materials lacking those sweeping overhead angles.
Want to start a drone photography business? The market rewards operators who understand more than just flying. You'll need pricing structures that actually cover your costs, insurance policies written for what you're really doing, FAA credentials you can show clients, and marketing that reaches people with actual budgets.
This guide covers what actually matters when building a drone photography business that pays bills instead of just filling Instagram feeds.
Flying commercially without FAA certification? That's a $1,100 fine per violation. The FAA doesn't send warning letters first. Your competition—especially the operator you undercut on that real estate job—knows exactly how to report you.
FAA Part 107 Certification Process
Commercial flying means getting your Remote Pilot Certificate. You need to be 16, pass an aeronautical knowledge test at an FAA testing center, and clear TSA's backg...