City overview
Overview
Fayetteville is located in North Carolina. Drone operations are governed by federal FAA regulations (14 CFR Part 107) and may be subject to state and local ordinances.
State Regulations & Statutes
North Carolina has specific drone surveillance statutes. N.C.G.S. § 15A-300.1 prohibits using a drone to conduct surveillance of individuals or property without consent, and establishes standards for when law enforcement may use drones. N.C.G.S. § 14-401.24 prohibits flying drones over private property to photograph or survey individuals without consent. Fayetteville is one of the most challenging drone environments in the nation due to the massive airspace footprint of Fort Liberty (formerly Fort Bragg), which creates extensive restricted and warning areas over the entire region. Pope Field (KPOB) airspace is interlinked with Fort Liberty operations.
Applicable Statutes & Penal Codes
- N.C.G.S. § 15A-300.1: Drone surveillance statute — prohibits using UAS to surveil individuals without consent; law enforcement must obtain warrant
- N.C.G.S. § 14-401.24: Unlawful to use drone to photograph or observe private property or individuals without consent
- Fort Liberty (Fort Bragg) restricted airspace: Extensive restricted areas over the entire region — no unauthorized UAS operations
- KPOB (Pope Army Airfield) restricted airspace: Active military airfield with Class D airspace and military operations area
- KFAY (Fayetteville Regional Airport) Class C airspace: LAANC authorization required within 5 nm
- Camp Mackall restricted airspace (western Cumberland County): Active Special Forces training area; no civilian UAS
- FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate required for all commercial drone operations
- FAA drone registration required for all UAS over 0.55 lbs
Permits & Registration
Commercial operations require FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. LAANC authorization required for KFAY Class C airspace. Fort Liberty and Pope Field restricted airspace is not available through LAANC — military coordination through Fort Liberty Public Affairs required, rarely approved. Camp Mackall (Restricted Area R-5313) is permanently restricted. Fayetteville city parks require written permit from City of Fayetteville Parks and Recreation.
Official Statute Links
- https://www.ncleg.gov/EnactedLegislation/Statutes/HTML/BySection/Chapter_15A/GS_15A-300.1.html
- https://www.ncleg.gov/EnactedLegislation/Statutes/HTML/BySection/Chapter_14/GS_14-401.24.html
- https://www.faa.gov/uas/commercial_operators/part_107/
- https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/publications/atpubs/afd_html/
City-specific rules
City-Specific Rules in Fayetteville
No city-specific drone-relevant regulations identified from currently reviewed official Fayetteville sources. Pilots still need to follow FAA requirements, North Carolina 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.
Fayetteville Regional Airport (Grannis Field) (KFAY) — 5 miles away
Tower Frequency: 119.1
Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.
Pope Army Airfield (KPOB) — 8 miles away
Tower Frequency: 126.2
Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.
Lumberton Regional Airport (KLBT) — 40 miles away
Tower Frequency: 122.8
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
- Hoke County rural farmland south of Fayetteville — outside most restricted airspace boundaries; verify with FAA sectional
- Robeson County agricultural areas south — flat Coastal Plain terrain outside military restricted zones
- Bladen County rural land southeast — outside Class C and Fort Liberty restricted areas with landowner permission
- Private farmland in Harnett County north — check LAANC carefully as Fort Liberty airspace extends significantly north
- Buckhorn Creek area (Harnett County) — verify current airspace status; outside primary restricted areas
- Rural Cumberland County east of I-95 — flat terrain; verify against military restricted area boundaries
Areas to Avoid
- Fort Liberty (Fort Bragg) — entire installation and surrounding restricted airspace R-5314/R-5315 series; no civilian UAS
- Pope Army Airfield (KPOB) — active C-130J operations; military Class D airspace; no civilian access
- Camp Mackall (R-5313) — permanently restricted Special Forces training reservation
- KFAY Class C airspace — covers Fayetteville urban core from surface; LAANC required
- All Fayetteville city parks — written permit required from Parks and Recreation
- Cross Creek Mall area — large public gathering area; avoid crowded retail corridors
- Cape Fear River Greenway — contact city parks for current policy on greenway drone operations
- Military housing areas adjacent to Fort Liberty — private residential property on federal land
Weather Considerations
Fayetteville has a humid subtropical climate with hot summers and mild winters. Located in the Sandhills region of North Carolina, the area experiences occasional hurricane impacts from Atlantic storms tracking inland — remnants can bring tropical storm-force winds and heavy rain. Summer afternoon thunderstorms are common June through September. Winter is generally mild but occasional ice storms affect the Sandhills. The Sandhills terrain provides relatively open flying conditions compared to coastal areas. Check NWS Raleigh (weather.gov/rah) for current conditions.
Seasonal Tips
BEST: March–April and October–November (mild temperatures, lower humidity, minimal storm activity). AVOID: July–August (heat, humidity, convective storms); hurricane season August–October when Gulf or Atlantic storms track through. Military training activities intensify in spring and fall — Fort Liberty often conducts large-scale exercises that expand temporary restricted areas. Always check NOTAMs before flying anywhere in Cumberland County or surrounding counties. Large airborne operations (paratroop drops) may activate TFRs with minimal public notice.
Compliance Checklist
- ✓ Federal FAA Part 107 or recreational exemption
- ✓ North Carolina state regulations
- ✓ Fayetteville local ordinances
- ✓ B4UFLY airspace check
- ✓ LAANC authorization if in controlled airspace
- ✓ Property owner permission
- ✓ Weather safety