City drone regulations

Las Vegas, Nevada Drone Laws

Find local drone regulations, ordinances, and airspace restrictions for Las Vegas, Nevada. 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

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

State Regulations & Statutes

Nevada regulates drone use through several statutes focused on privacy, critical infrastructure protection, and law enforcement limitations. Recreational and commercial drone operations are permitted subject to FAA Part 107. Nevada State Parks ban drones in most parks without a permit. Las Vegas presents the most complex and potentially most dangerous urban drone environment in Nevada.

Applicable Statutes & Penal Codes

  • N.R.S. § 493.103: Unlawful to fly a drone over private property with intent to capture images of the occupants
  • N.R.S. § 493.109: Prohibited drone operations over critical infrastructure (casinos, power plants, water facilities, transportation hubs)
  • N.R.S. § 493.112: Law enforcement may not use drones without a warrant — affirms civilian privacy expectations
  • N.R.S. § 200.604: Video voyeurism — drone surveillance of private individuals without consent is a criminal offense
  • Nevada State Parks: Drones banned in most state parks without a permit
  • Nellis AFB (KLSV): Restricted and prohibited military airspace northeast of Las Vegas — civilian drone operations prohibited in active restricted areas
  • 14 CFR Part 107: Maximum 400 ft AGL, visual line of sight required, FAA registration mandatory for aircraft 0.55 lbs and over

Permits & Registration

Commercial operators must hold an FAA Remote Pilot Certificate (Part 107). Recreational flyers must register drones weighing 0.55 lbs or more at registerdrone.faa.gov. Nevada State Parks require a permit for drone use. No additional Nevada state permit exists for general operations outside parks. The Las Vegas Strip and surrounding resort corridor are effectively off-limits due to KLAS Class B core airspace and extreme air traffic.

Official Statute Links

City-specific rules

City-Specific Rules in Las Vegas

No city-specific drone-relevant regulations identified from currently reviewed official Las Vegas sources. Pilots still need to follow FAA requirements, Nevada 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.

Harry Reid International Airport (KLAS) — 3 miles away

Tower Frequency: 119.9

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

North Las Vegas Airport (KVGT) — 6 miles away

Tower Frequency: 125.7

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

Henderson Executive Airport (KHND) — 11 miles away

Tower Frequency: 125.1

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

Nellis Air Force Base (KLSV) — 9 miles away

Tower Frequency: 132.55

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

  • Far west Las Vegas Valley open desert beyond KLAS Class B shelf — verify airspace via LAANC/B4UFLY before every flight; no assumptions are safe here
  • Spring Mountains National Recreation Area west of the valley — check USFS drone rules and FAA airspace well in advance
  • Desert National Wildlife Refuge portions north of the valley (check USFWS drone policy) — confirm Nellis MOA status before flying
  • Private property with owner consent in suburban areas — always check LAANC first; much of the valley sits under Class B shelves

Areas to Avoid

  • KLAS Class B core airspace — covers the entire Strip and surrounding resort corridor; no drone operations without LAANC or FAA waiver
  • The Las Vegas Strip: Even with LAANC authorization, extreme helicopter and air taxi tour traffic creates serious collision risk — operations strongly discouraged
  • KVGT Class D airspace (surface to 3,600 ft MSL within ~4.4 nm) covering north Las Vegas — LAANC required
  • KHND Class D airspace covering southeast metro — LAANC required
  • Nellis AFB (KLSV) restricted and prohibited airspace to the northeast — strictly off-limits when active
  • Allegiant Stadium and surrounding area during NFL games and major events (TFR active)
  • All Las Vegas city parks without prior Parks authorization
  • Casino resort rooftops, pools, and outdoor areas — private property plus N.R.S. § 493.109 critical infrastructure restrictions

Weather Considerations

Las Vegas sits at approximately 2,000 ft MSL in the Mojave Desert. Summers are extremely hot (115°F+) with intense solar radiation, dry air, and strong convective thermals by mid-morning. Dust devils are common in spring. Winter days are mild (50–65°F) but afternoons can be windy. August monsoon moisture occasionally brings brief but intense afternoon thunderstorms. The surrounding mountains can cause turbulent downslope winds particularly in spring.

Seasonal Tips

BEST: October through April — comfortable temperatures, stable air, and dry conditions ideal for drone operations; winter mornings offer the most stable and predictable flying windows. AVOID: June–September (extreme heat; battery failure risk; August monsoon thunderstorms); any time Nellis AFB restricted areas are active; during major Las Vegas events and New Year's Eve when both TFRs and extreme crowd density make any flight inadvisable near the resort corridor.

Compliance Checklist

  • ✓ Federal FAA Part 107 or recreational exemption
  • ✓ Nevada state regulations
  • ✓ Las Vegas 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.