City drone regulations

Tampa, Florida Drone Laws

Find local drone regulations, ordinances, and airspace restrictions for Tampa, Florida. 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

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

State Regulations & Statutes

Florida Statute § 330.41 (Freedom from Unwarranted Surveillance Act) preempts all local drone ordinances — no city or county in Florida may enact laws restricting where or when drones are flown on public or private property. Local governments may only regulate drones on property they own or control (parks, government buildings). Florida Statute § 330.30 prohibits UAS operations over critical infrastructure including power plants and water treatment facilities. Florida Statute § 316.2927 bans drone flight over correctional facilities. Florida Statute § 934.50 prohibits government surveillance by drone without a warrant. Florida Statute § 843.23 makes interfering with law enforcement via drone a criminal offense. All commercial operations require FAA Part 107 certification. Recreational flyers must register drones over 0.55 lbs with the FAA.

Applicable Statutes & Penal Codes

  • Florida law preempts all local drone ordinances — cities cannot restrict flights on public/private land
  • Local governments MAY regulate drones on city-owned property (parks, government facilities)
  • No drone flight over critical infrastructure: power plants, water treatment facilities (§ 330.30)
  • No drone flight over correctional facilities (§ 316.2927)
  • No drone use for surveillance without consent (§ 330.41)
  • No government drone surveillance without a warrant (§ 934.50)
  • Interfering with law enforcement via drone is a criminal offense (§ 843.23)
  • MacDill Air Force Base has permanent restricted airspace — no civilian drone operations within the restricted zone
  • FAA Part 107 required for commercial operations
  • Recreational drones over 0.55 lbs must be FAA-registered
  • LAANC authorization required for all operations in KTPA Class B controlled airspace

Permits & Registration

Commercial: FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate required. No additional Florida state permit needed. Recreational: Register drone at faadronezone.faa.gov if over 0.55 lbs. Use LAANC (via apps such as AirMap, Aloft, or DroneZone) for airspace authorization around KTPA Class B. MacDill AFB (KMCF) restricted airspace requires direct coordination with MacDill Air Traffic Control — no LAANC available.

Official Statute Links

City-specific rules

City-Specific Rules in Tampa

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

Tampa International Airport (KTPA) — 5 miles away

Tower Frequency: 119.1

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

Peter O. Knight Airport (KTPF) — 4 miles away

Tower Frequency: 119.675

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

MacDill Air Force Base (KMCF) — 6 miles away

Tower Frequency: 133.45

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

Tampa Executive Airport (Vandenberg) (KVDF) — 10 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

  • Flatwoods Park (New Tampa/Wesley Chapel area) — outside KTPA Class B core; Hillsborough County permit required
  • Upper Tampa Bay Park (Town 'N' Country) — Hillsborough County Parks permit required; large open areas
  • Lettuce Lake Regional Park — Hillsborough County Parks permit required; verify airspace with LAANC
  • Private agricultural land in eastern Hillsborough County with landowner permission — generally below Class B floor
  • E.G. Simmons Regional Park (south Hillsborough, Ruskin area) — outside core airspace; county permit required
  • Cockroach Bay Preserve area (south Hillsborough) — verify LAANC authorization; scenic coastal flying

Areas to Avoid

  • KTPA Class B airspace — covers most of the city; LAANC authorization required
  • MacDill AFB restricted airspace (R-2901A/B) — no civilian drone operations
  • Peter O. Knight Airport (KTPF) Class D — coordinate with tower; busy general aviation traffic on Davis Islands
  • Port Tampa Bay and adjacent industrial waterfront — port security and Class B restrictions
  • Downtown Tampa / Channelside — Class B core airspace, dense urban environment
  • Ybor City historic district — Class B and urban density
  • Hillsborough County Jail and Orient Road Jail area — prohibited under § 316.2927
  • TECO power plants and Hillsborough River water treatment infrastructure — § 330.30
  • Raymond James Stadium (NFL TFRs for Buccaneers home games) — check notam.faa.gov
  • Amalie Arena on event days — TFRs possible for major events

Weather Considerations

Tampa has a humid subtropical climate with a pronounced wet season from June through September. Afternoon thunderstorms are extremely common and intense — the Tampa Bay area is one of the most lightning-struck regions in the United States. Morning flying before 11 AM is strongly advised during summer. Sea breeze convergence zones create localized storm development over the bay by early afternoon. Hurricane season (June 1 – November 30) requires close monitoring. Winter months bring clear, dry conditions with occasional cold fronts producing gusty northerly winds.

Seasonal Tips

BEST: November through April — dry season, low humidity, minimal thunderstorm risk, temperatures 60–80°F. Morning windows are ideal year-round. AVOID: June through September — near-daily afternoon thunderstorms (often beginning before 2 PM), extreme humidity, lightning risk. The Tampa Bay area averages more cloud-to-ground lightning strikes per square mile than almost anywhere else in North America. Hurricane season monitoring required June–November.

Compliance Checklist

  • ✓ Federal FAA Part 107 or recreational exemption
  • ✓ Florida state regulations
  • ✓ Tampa 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.