Short answer: Drone operations near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) should be treated carefully because airport-adjacent flights may involve controlled airspace and authorization requirements.
Key federal rules this site is built around
Drone Rules HQ is not a law firm and this page is only a starting point. These are the federal sources that drive most baseline requirements (then local/property rules may add additional restrictions):
- 49 U.S.C. § 44809 (recreational exception)
- 14 CFR Part 107 (Small UAS rule / Part 107 operations)
- 14 CFR Part 89 (Remote ID)
- 14 CFR Part 48 (aircraft registration for small UAS)
Why this airport page is only a starting point
This page covers one airport reference area, not every drone launch point in Fort Worth. Exact airspace and site-specific conditions matter more than airport name alone.
Why this area needs extra caution
Drone operations near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport may involve controlled airspace and authorization requirements.
Recreational flyers
Recreational flyers should verify current FAA restrictions and airspace tools before operating near an airport and should not assume recreational status removes controlled-airspace limits.
Part 107 operators
Part 107 operators may need authorization depending on the airspace involved, and airport proximity alone does not answer whether a specific launch point is permitted.
Separate local restrictions
Airport, property, event, and venue-specific restrictions around Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport may apply separately from FAA rules.
FAA tools and what to check next
- FAA Getting Started for the baseline drone workflow and official guidance.
- FAA B4UFLY for situational awareness before flight.
- FAA LAANC if the exact launch point is in controlled airspace and authorization may be required.
- FAA Remote ID if your aircraft or operation falls under Remote ID requirements.
Important note about airport details
This page does not publish tower, CTAF, ATIS, or airspace-class details unless they have been verified from current official FAA sources at build time. Always verify current airport and airspace information before flight.
For the broader city-level starting point, see Can I Fly a Drone in Fort Worth, TX?
For the statewide overview, see Texas drone laws for recreational and Part 107 pilots.