City overview
Overview
Seattle is located in Washington. Drone operations are governed by federal FAA regulations (14 CFR Part 107) and may be subject to state and local ordinances.
State Regulations & Statutes
Washington State has enacted drone-specific privacy and criminal statutes that apply on top of federal FAA regulations. Using a drone to record individuals in a private setting without consent is a gross misdemeanor or felony under RCW § 9A.44.115 (voyeurism). Drone trespass over private property is covered under RCW § 9A.52.070. Washington State Parks prohibits drone operations without a permit. Commercial operators must hold an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate; recreational flyers must register with the FAA and follow the recreational rules.
Applicable Statutes & Penal Codes
- RCW § 9A.44.115 — Voyeurism via drone: gross misdemeanor (first offense) or Class C felony (repeat/aggravated)
- RCW § 9A.52.070 — Criminal trespass: drone flight over private property without permission may constitute trespass
- Washington State Parks: drone flight prohibited without prior written permit from park manager
- 14 CFR Part 107 — Remote Pilot Certificate required for commercial operations
- 14 CFR § 91.126/91.130 — must obtain authorization before flying in Class B/C/D/E controlled airspace
Permits & Registration
Commercial operations require FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Recreational flyers must register drones over 0.55 lbs at registerdrone.faa.gov and pass TRUST test. Washington State Parks permit required for any drone flight in state park boundaries — contact individual park offices.
Official Statute Links
City-specific rules
City-Specific Rules in Seattle
No city-specific drone-relevant regulations identified from currently reviewed official Seattle sources. Pilots still need to follow FAA requirements, Washington 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.
Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (KSEA) — 14 miles away
Tower Frequency: 119.9
Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.
Boeing Field / King County International Airport (KBFI) — 4 miles away
Tower Frequency: 120.1
Requirements: Check B4UFLY for airspace class. Request LAANC authorization if needed. Contact airport operations.
Renton Municipal Airport (KRNT) — 9 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
- Marymoor Park in Redmond (King County Park, ~16 mi northeast — verify current rules with King County Parks)
- Snoqualmie Valley rural farmland (~30 mi east — verify private land permission)
- Rural Snohomish County east of Everett (low density, verify property rights)
- Lake Sammamish State Park periphery (WA State Parks permit required)
Areas to Avoid
- Seattle-Tacoma International (KSEA) Class B airspace — covers much of King County, LAANC authorization required
- Boeing Field (KBFI) Class D — covers South Seattle / SoDo / Beacon Hill to 2,500 ft MSL
- Renton Municipal (KRNT) Class D — covers Renton and SE Seattle neighborhoods to 2,500 ft MSL
- All Seattle City parks — prohibited without Parks Department written approval
- Downtown Seattle core — within KBFI Class D and KSEA Class B shelf
- Puget Sound marine areas — no-fly near active ferry lanes and Coast Guard zones
- Joint Base Lewis-McChord (KLEW/KTCM) restricted airspace ~30 mi south
Weather Considerations
Seattle has a marine west coast climate. Persistent low ceilings (500–2,000 ft) are common October through April, with fog and drizzle frequent. Summer (July–September) is reliably dry and clear with ceilings well above 10,000 ft. Orographic lift off the Olympics and Cascades creates turbulence. Check NWS Seattle (weather.gov/sew) and ADDS for current METARs at KSEA and KBFI before flying.
Seasonal Tips
BEST: July–September — long days, dry, clear skies, light winds. AVOID: November–March — persistent rain, low IFR ceilings, fog, high winds. Spring (April–June) is marginal but improving; afternoon clearing windows exist. Summer mornings often have marine stratus that burns off by 10–11 AM.
Compliance Checklist
- ✓ Federal FAA Part 107 or recreational exemption
- ✓ Washington state regulations
- ✓ Seattle local ordinances
- ✓ B4UFLY airspace check
- ✓ LAANC authorization if in controlled airspace
- ✓ Property owner permission
- ✓ Weather safety