City overview
Overview
Lansing is located in Michigan. Drone operations are governed by federal FAA regulations (14 CFR Part 107) and may be subject to state and local ordinances.
State Regulations & Statutes
Michigan drone law is governed by MCL § 259.322, which prohibits drone surveillance of private property without consent and restricts drone operations near correctional facilities and public safety incidents. MCL § 259.322(5) establishes that Michigan preempts local drone ordinances, limiting municipalities to regulating city-owned property. Lansing is the state capital of Michigan and home to Michigan State University, both creating unique drone considerations. Capital Region International Airport (KLAN) creates Class D airspace over much of East Lansing and nearby areas. The Michigan State Capitol building and state government campus are subject to Michigan State Police security protocols for drone operations. MSU's campus is private university property with its own UAS policy. The Grand River and Red Cedar River corridors through Lansing have parks managed by the City of Lansing Parks and Recreation Department. Commercial operators must hold an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate.
Applicable Statutes & Penal Codes
- MCL § 259.322 — Michigan drone surveillance prohibition: cannot use drone to conduct surveillance of private property without consent
- MCL § 259.322(3) — Drone operations near correctional facilities prohibited: includes Michigan State corrections facilities in the Lansing area
- MCL § 259.322(5) — Michigan preempts local drone ordinances
- Capital Region International Airport (KLAN) — Class D airspace: LAANC authorization required; covers Lansing and East Lansing
- Michigan State Capitol — state government security: drone operations over or near the Capitol must be coordinated with Michigan State Police Capitol Security Division
- Michigan State University campus — private university property: explicit MSU authorization required under MSU's UAS policy
- 14 CFR Part 107 — Remote Pilot Certificate required for commercial operations
Permits & Registration
Commercial operators require FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Michigan State Capitol drone operations: contact Michigan State Police Capitol Security Division at (517) 373-0904 — coordination required in advance; random flights over the Capitol building are not permitted. Michigan State University UAS authorization: contact MSU Infrastructure Planning and Facilities at (517) 355-2700 — MSU requires registration and advance approval for all drone flights on campus including Spartan Stadium. LAANC authorization for KLAN available via FAA DroneZone. City of Lansing commercial filming permit: contact Lansing Parks and Recreation at (517) 483-4277. Michigan DNR state park authorizations: (517) 284-9453.
Official Statute Links
City-specific rules
City-Specific Rules in Lansing
No city-specific drone-relevant regulations identified from currently reviewed official Lansing sources. Pilots still need to follow FAA requirements, Michigan 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.
Capital Region International Airport (KLAN) — 4 miles away
Tower Frequency: 124.6
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
- Rural Ingham County farmland outside KLAN Class D (verify with LAANC) — south or east of Lansing; flat agricultural land with private landowner permission
- Delta Township area (~8 mi west, potentially outside Class D) — verify LAANC boundaries; suburban and agricultural areas with appropriate permissions
- Meridian Township / Haslett area (~10 mi east, potentially outside Class D shelf) — suburban area; verify B4UFLY and obtain appropriate permits
Areas to Avoid
- Capital Region International Airport (KLAN) Class D — LAANC required for much of Lansing and East Lansing
- Michigan State Capitol Complex — coordinate with MSP Capitol Security before flights
- Michigan State University campus — private: authorization required
- Spartan Stadium on game days — potential FAA TFR under 14 CFR § 99
- All Michigan correctional facilities in the area — MCL § 259.322(3) prohibition
- Hospital campuses — private property restrictions
Weather Considerations
Lansing has a humid continental climate with cold, snowy winters and hot, humid summers. Located in central Lower Michigan, Lansing can receive significant snowfall from November through March, occasionally enhanced by Lake Michigan lake-effect systems when winds are from the west or northwest. Winters are cold (0°F possible) with ice storms. Spring brings severe thunderstorm season (April–May). Summers are warm with afternoon convective storms. The Red Cedar and Grand River valleys can create localized fog during calm, humid periods. Check NWS Grand Rapids (weather.gov/grr) for Lansing-area forecasts.
Seasonal Tips
BEST: May–June and September–October — mild temperatures, lower precipitation, good visibility. Fall foliage along the river corridor can be attractive for aerial photography. AVOID: November–March for cold temperatures and ice/snow. AVOID: April–May peak severe weather season — monitor radar actively. Always check LAANC before flying anywhere in the Lansing area due to KLAN Class D coverage.
Compliance Checklist
- ✓ Federal FAA Part 107 or recreational exemption
- ✓ Michigan state regulations
- ✓ Lansing local ordinances
- ✓ B4UFLY airspace check
- ✓ LAANC authorization if in controlled airspace
- ✓ Property owner permission
- ✓ Weather safety