FCC says drones can preserve getting software program updates by 2029


Excellent news for homeowners of DJI drones, Autel drones and different foreign-made drones: the FCC has prolonged the deadline for foreign-made drones to proceed receiving software program and firmware updates from January 2027 to a minimum of January 1, 2029.

The FCC’s Workplace of Engineering and Know-how issued the extension on Might 8, and it applies to all drones and drone elements that have been licensed to be used in america earlier than being added to the Coated Checklist in December 2025. For drone homeowners, meaning DJI drones which can be authorized to fly presently can even proceed to obtain safety patches, bug fixes, and compatibility updates for a minimum of two extra years than beforehand anticipated.

What the unique ban really stated about software program updates

When the FCC added foreign-made drones to the Coated Checklist in December 2025, the principles that adopted created an issue that went past simply blocking new drone gross sales. The revised FCC guidelines at 47 CFR §§ 2.932(b) and a couple of.1043(b) successfully prohibited even minor software program and firmware updates (together with safety patches) for any gadget on the Coated Checklist. That meant your current DJI drone might have been lower off from updates totally, probably leaving it weak to safety exploits with none approach to repair them.

In January 2026, the FCC issued a brief waiver permitting current drones to maintain receiving updates till January 1, 2027. With this newest Might 8 extension, that deadline pushes to January 1, 2029, and expands the scope of what’s permitted. (Beforehand, solely so-called Class I permissive modifications that are minor updates that don’t alter the core performance of the gadget have been allowed.)

The brand new waiver extends the permission to Class II permissive modifications as nicely, which covers extra substantial software program enhancements that also mitigate hurt to customers. Each lessons now embody safety patches, vulnerability fixes, and compatibility updates.

Why that is excellent news

The FCC ban has largely been dangerous information for individuals who personal drones. However this can be a small piece of fine information. In spite of everything, a drone that may’t obtain firmware updates generally is a safety threat within the occasion {that a} safety vulnerability is found however can’t be patched.

It was fairly ironic that sure politicians lobbied to ban DJI drones over safety considerations, and the FCC ban made it so drones might fly however not get software program updates that mitigate any potential safety dangers. No less than we’ve got a number of extra years of with the ability to replace current drones (and guidelines might proceed to alter and get prolonged by then). And it’s doable the extension turns into everlasting coverage reasonably than a collection of rolling extensions. In spite of everything, the Workplace of Engineering and Know-how famous it would “as quickly as practicable, advocate to the complete Fee that it contemplate codifying this waiver by a rulemaking.”

Within the meantime, we’re nonetheless ready to see how DJI’s ongoing FCC litigation resolves. It additionally affords extra time for companies to guage (and funds for) Blue UAS-compliant options.

The Drone Advocacy Alliance (DAA), which has been one of the lively organizations opposing the ban and which coordinated a public remark marketing campaign forward of the Might 11 deadline, issued a press release crediting the neighborhood response for serving to transfer the needle.

“Greater than 3,000 of you spoke out, telling tales of how you utilize your drones and what a ban means for you — way over virtually another comparable FCC remark interval acquired,” the DAA wrote. “When drone fans make our voices heard in giant numbers like this, we are able to actually make a distinction.”

However whereas the DAA framed the extension as a partial win, it acknowledged that the broader battle continues.

“Whereas there may be nonetheless work to do, this can be a large step and a win for drone customers within the meantime, whereas the FCC decides whether or not to roll again different parts of its ban,” in line with a ready DAA assertion.

That’s largely in reference to the core ban on new DJI and Autel merchandise getting into the U.S. market. With that (which was introduced on the finish of 2025), new drone fashions from international producers nonetheless can’t be offered or licensed within the U.S. underneath the present Coated Checklist guidelines. The extension solely protects drones that have been already licensed earlier than December 22, 2025, which suggests drones that haven’t acquired FCC approval as of that deadline can’t be offered within the U.S.


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