City drone regulations

Albuquerque, New Mexico Drone Laws

Find local drone regulations, ordinances, and airspace restrictions for Albuquerque, New Mexico. Compliance requirements for recreational and Part 107 pilots.

Updated regularly Informational use only
Informational use only. This site is not legal advice, aviation advice, or an official FAA or local-government publication. Rules, restrictions, authorizations, and local requirements can change. Verify current requirements with the FAA, B4UFLY, LAANC/UAS service suppliers, airport operators, property owners, and local authorities before flight.

City overview

Overview

Albuquerque is located in New Mexico. Drone operations are governed by federal FAA regulations (14 CFR Part 107) and may be subject to state and local ordinances.

State Regulations & Statutes

New Mexico has privacy and trespass statutes that apply to drone operations. NMSA § 30-12-1 (invasion of privacy) can apply to drone surveillance without consent. NMSA § 30-14-1 (criminal trespass) applies to drone intrusions over private property. The Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD) prohibits drones in New Mexico State Parks without a special use permit. Albuquerque presents unique airspace complexity: Kirtland Air Force Base is co-located with Albuquerque International Sunport (KABQ) and hosts one of the most sensitive restricted airspace areas in the United States due to nuclear weapons storage — P-50 and R-5107 are absolute prohibited/restricted areas. Commercial operators need FAA Part 107; recreational flyers must register with the FAA.

Applicable Statutes & Penal Codes

  • NMSA § 30-12-1 — Invasion of privacy: drone surveillance of persons without consent may constitute criminal invasion of privacy
  • NMSA § 30-14-1 — Criminal trespass: drone flights over private property without permission may constitute trespass
  • EMNRD: drone flight prohibited in New Mexico State Parks without special use permit
  • P-50 / R-5107 — Kirtland AFB nuclear facilities: absolutely prohibited airspace, one of the most sensitive restricted areas in the USA
  • 14 CFR Part 107 — Remote Pilot Certificate required for commercial operations
  • 14 CFR § 91.130 — Class C authorization required before flying near Albuquerque International Sunport (KABQ)

Permits & Registration

Commercial operations require FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Recreational flyers must register drones over 0.55 lbs and pass TRUST test. New Mexico State Parks special use permit required for drone operations — contact EMNRD State Parks Division (888-667-2757). LAANC authorization available for KABQ Class C airspace via FAA DroneZone or approved apps — but note that Kirtland AFB co-location means extreme caution is required even with LAANC approval. Confirm P-50/R-5107 status via 1800wxbrief.com before any flight in the KABQ area.

Official Statute Links

City-specific rules

City-Specific Rules in Albuquerque

No city-specific drone-relevant regulations identified from currently reviewed official Albuquerque sources. Pilots still need to follow FAA requirements, New Mexico law, and any property-owner or site-specific restrictions before takeoff or landing.

No city-specific drone-relevant regulations identified

Only current city rules with a direct drone nexus are listed on this page. Review the state rules, airspace limits, and property-specific restrictions before launch or landing.

Nearby Airports & Airspace

Airspace restrictions apply near airports. Always check B4UFLY and LAANC before flying.

Albuquerque International Sunport / Kirtland AFB (KABQ) — 5 miles away

Tower Frequency: 118.3

Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.

Double Eagle II Airport (KAEG) — 18 miles away

Tower Frequency: See airnav.com

Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.

Moriarty Airport (0E0) — 40 miles away

Tower Frequency: See airnav.com

Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.

Local Flying Guide

Always verify conditions with local authorities and property owners before flight.

Potential Safe Flying Locations

  • Rio Rancho open mesa areas to the northwest (~15 mi — verify outside KABQ Class C surface and private property rights; check B4UFLY)
  • East Mountains (Tijeras/Edgewood area, ~20 mi east, outside Class C — verify USFS restrictions and private land access)
  • South Valley rural areas near Isleta (~10 mi south — verify outside Class C, respect Isleta Pueblo boundaries)
  • Double Eagle II Airport (KAEG) environs (~18 mi northwest — uncontrolled airport area, verify runway activity)

Areas to Avoid

  • P-50 — Kirtland AFB Nuclear Weapons Storage Area: ABSOLUTELY PROHIBITED, one of the most sensitive restricted areas in the USA — military interception possible
  • R-5107 — Kirtland AFB Range: restricted airspace, active during military operations
  • Albuquerque International Sunport (KABQ) Class C — covers most of central Albuquerque, LAANC required
  • Petroglyph National Monument — NPS 36 CFR § 1.5 prohibition
  • Sandia Mountains / Sandia Crest — Cibola National Forest USFS restrictions
  • All City parks — advance authorization required from Parks and Recreation
  • Pueblo lands (Sandia Pueblo north, Isleta Pueblo south) — tribal sovereignty; drones prohibited without tribal authorization

Weather Considerations

Albuquerque has a semi-arid high desert climate at 5,312 ft elevation. The high altitude (thin air) meaningfully reduces drone lift and battery performance — expect 10–20% shorter flight times compared to sea level. Spring (March–May) brings frequent strong winds (gusts 30–50 mph). Afternoon thunderstorms are common July–September (monsoon season). Winters are generally clear and calm — the best season for flying. Check NWS Albuquerque (weather.gov/abq).

Seasonal Tips

BEST: October–February — clear skies, calm winds, mild daytime temperatures. AVOID: July–September monsoon afternoons (thunderstorms typically develop 2–5 PM). AVOID: March–May for high wind events. Summer mornings before noon are flyable during monsoon season. Account for high-altitude performance reduction in all seasons — plan shorter flights and bring extra batteries.

Compliance Checklist

  • ✓ Federal FAA Part 107 or recreational exemption
  • ✓ New Mexico state regulations
  • ✓ Albuquerque local ordinances
  • ✓ B4UFLY airspace check
  • ✓ LAANC authorization if in controlled airspace
  • ✓ Property owner permission
  • ✓ Weather safety

Important Disclaimer

This content is provided for general informational purposes only and may be incomplete, outdated, or inapplicable to your specific situation.

Always confirm current requirements directly with the FAA, B4UFLY, LAANC, airport operators, local authorities, and property owners before flight.