FEATURE FILM INSURANCE / DRONE & AERIAL FILMING
PART 107 DRONE & MANNED AERIAL COVERAGE

DRONE AND AERIAL FILMING
INSURANCE FOR EVERY ALTITUDE

Coverage built for what's actually in the air. FAA Part 107 commercial drone hull and liability, helicopter aerial cinematography, fixed-wing camera platforms, and specialty rigs — placed through aviation-specialty markets that underwrite aerial production every day.

AERIAL COVERAGE WE PLACE
  • FAA PART 107 COMMERCIAL DRONE
  • CINEMA DRONE HULL & LIABILITY
  • HELICOPTER AERIAL CINEMATOGRAPHY
  • FIXED-WING CAMERA PLATFORMS
  • HEAVY-LIFT & PROFESSIONAL RIGS
  • FPV & RACING DRONE COVERAGE
  • OPERATOR-OWNED ANNUAL POLICIES
  • PROJECT-BASED AERIAL POLICIES
AERIAL IS ITS OWN UNDERWRITING DISCIPLINE

DRONE COVERAGE ISN'T A FILM POLICY ENDORSEMENT

Aerial production sits in its own underwriting world — typically aviation-specialty carriers rather than standard film carriers. The structure, the documentation, and the risk class are all different.

Drone and aerial filming insurance is structured differently from a typical production package policy. Aerial work is generally underwritten by aviation-specialty markets that look at pilot credentials, aircraft specifics, mission type, and operational protocols — not the typical film production checklist. Adding a drone or helicopter to a project frequently means a separate policy line, written in coordination with the broader production program.

For commercial drone work in the United States, the FAA Part 107 framework governs commercial small unmanned aircraft operations. Carriers writing aerial film coverage typically expect Part 107 certification for the remote pilot in command, documentation of the drone equipment, and operational details — including whether operations involve flight over people, beyond visual line of sight, or at night.

For manned aerial cinematography — helicopter or fixed-wing — the underwriting expectations expand: pilot credentials, aircraft type, mount system, mission profile, and crew on board. We coordinate aerial coverage with the rest of the production stack — equipment, liability, workers comp, and excess limits — so the program holds together when the cameras are flying. See film equipment insurance for related ground-side coverage.

DRONE AND AERIAL FILMING INSURANCE FOR FILM PRODUCTIONS
DRONE • HELICOPTER • FIXED-WING
AERIAL FILMING CATEGORIES

WHAT "AERIAL" ACTUALLY COVERS

Aerial cinematography is a category, not a single operation. Each platform carries its own carrier appetite, credential requirements, and underwriting expectations.

CATEGORY 01

PART 107 COMMERCIAL DRONE

Commercial small unmanned aircraft operations under the FAA Part 107 framework. The most common aerial film category for indie and mid-budget productions.

REMOTE PILOT IN COMMAND
CATEGORY 02

CINEMA DRONE PLATFORMS

Heavy-lift and professional cinema drone systems carrying full-size cinema cameras, gimbals, and broadcast-grade payloads. Higher hull values and operator credentials expected.

CINEMA-GRADE HULL
CATEGORY 03

HELICOPTER AERIAL

Manned helicopter aerial cinematography with mounted camera systems — gyroscopic mounts, nose mounts, door mounts. Aviation-specialty underwriting required.

MANNED AVIATION
CATEGORY 04

FIXED-WING CAMERA

Fixed-wing aircraft with mounted camera systems for high-altitude, long-distance, or high-speed aerial cinematography.

AIRCRAFT-MOUNTED
CATEGORY 05

FPV & RACING DRONES

First-person-view and racing drone cinematography — high-speed, high-maneuverability flight common in action sequences and chase work.

SPECIALTY OPERATIONS
CATEGORY 06

INDOOR DRONE OPS

Drone cinematography inside soundstages, warehouses, and other indoor environments. Different operational and underwriting profile than outdoor flight.

CONTROLLED ENVIRONMENT
CATEGORY 07

NIGHT OPERATIONS

Drone work conducted at night — requiring specific FAA waivers or operational approvals, anti-collision lighting, and additional operational protocols.

PART 107 NIGHT
CATEGORY 08

OVER PEOPLE / OVER MOVING VEHICLES

Operations involving flight over people or moving vehicles — typically requiring specific FAA category designation and elevated underwriting scrutiny.

CATEGORIZED OPS
CATEGORY 09

SPECIALTY AERIAL

Tethered drones, balloon-mounted cameras, and other non-standard aerial cinematography platforms. Often placed with specialty aviation markets.

NON-STANDARD
TWO COVERAGES, ONE PROGRAM

HULL COVERAGE VS. LIABILITY COVERAGE

Drone and aerial coverage is generally written as two coordinated parts — hull coverage protects the aircraft itself, while liability coverage protects against claims from others. Most professional aerial programs include both.

COVERAGE 01

HULL COVERAGE

Coverage for physical damage to the aircraft itself — drone, helicopter, or fixed-wing — including the camera and gimbal payload. Protects the operator's investment in the equipment.

  • Physical damage to the aircraft
  • Damage to camera and gimbal payload
  • Crash, water immersion, fly-aways
  • In-transit damage in some structures
  • Replacement-cost or agreed-value basis
PROTECTS: THE AIRCRAFT & PAYLOAD
COVERAGE 02

LIABILITY COVERAGE

Coverage for third-party bodily injury and property damage caused by the aircraft — to people on the ground, vehicles, structures, or other aircraft. Typically required by film carriers, locations, and FAA-related contracts.

  • Third-party bodily injury
  • Property damage from the aircraft
  • Damage to filming locations
  • Damage to other aircraft (rare but real)
  • Defense costs for covered claims
PROTECTS: THE OPERATOR & PRODUCTION
WHAT UNDERWRITERS NEED

HOW AERIAL COVERAGE ACTUALLY GETS BOUND

Aviation-specialty carriers don't bind aerial coverage from a one-line request. Here are the elements they typically need to evaluate and place the risk.

01

PILOT CREDENTIALS

FAA Part 107 remote pilot certificate for drone work, or FAA pilot certifications and ratings for manned aerial. Documentation of currency and experience.

02

FLIGHT EXPERIENCE

Total flight hours on the specific aircraft type, prior commercial film production experience, and loss history if any.

03

AIRCRAFT DETAILS

Make, model, serial number, total airframe time, and replacement value of the drone, helicopter, or fixed-wing aircraft being covered.

04

PAYLOAD DOCUMENTATION

Camera, gimbal, lens, and payload specifics with values — particularly important when cinema-grade payloads are mounted to the aircraft.

05

MISSION PROFILE

Type of work being performed — beauty shots, action sequences, chase work, indoor flight, night operations, flight over people. Each affects underwriting.

06

FAA WAIVERS & APPROVALS

Documentation of any specific FAA waivers required for the operation — night operations, BVLOS, flight over people, or other non-standard operational categories.

07

OPERATIONAL PROTOCOLS

Documented pre-flight checklists, weather minimums, observer protocols, and emergency procedures the operator follows for each flight.

08

TERRITORY & LOCATIONS

Where the aerial work will take place — domestic vs. international, controlled airspace, restricted areas, or environmentally sensitive locations.

ELEVATED-RISK SCENARIOS

AERIAL OPERATIONS THAT REQUIRE EXTRA UNDERWRITING

Some aerial operations carry heightened risk that requires specific FAA approvals, additional documentation, and tighter underwriting. Here are the most common scenarios.

SCENARIO 01

FLIGHT OVER PEOPLE

Operations where the drone passes over people not directly involved in the shoot — typically requires specific FAA category designation.

SCENARIO 02

FLIGHT OVER MOVING VEHICLES

Drone operations over moving cars, trucks, or other vehicles — common in chase sequences and action filmmaking.

SCENARIO 03

NIGHT OPERATIONS

Drone work after civil twilight — anti-collision lighting and specific operational protocols required under Part 107.

SCENARIO 04

BEYOND VISUAL LINE OF SIGHT

BVLOS operations where the drone flies beyond the operator's direct visual contact — typically requires specific FAA waiver.

SCENARIO 05

CONTROLLED AIRSPACE

Operations in airspace requiring ATC authorization — near airports, in restricted zones, or in coordinated airspace.

SCENARIO 06

CHASE & ACTION WORK

High-speed chase sequences, racing drone operations, and action cinematography that pushes operational limits and risk profile.

SCENARIO 07

SWARM OR MULTI-DRONE

Multiple drones flying simultaneously — coordinated operations with elevated complexity and underwriting requirements.

SCENARIO 08

INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONS

Aerial work outside the United States — different regulatory frameworks, territorial coverage, and equipment importation considerations.

MANNED AERIAL CINEMATOGRAPHY

HELICOPTER & FIXED-WING COVERAGE

HELICOPTER AND FIXED-WING AERIAL CINEMATOGRAPHY INSURANCE
  • 1

    HELICOPTER AERIAL CINEMATOGRAPHY

    Coverage for manned helicopter operations with mounted gimbal systems, gyroscopic stabilizers, nose mounts, and door mounts.

  • 2

    FIXED-WING CAMERA AIRCRAFT

    Long-distance, high-altitude, and high-speed aerial cinematography from fixed-wing platforms with camera mounts.

  • 3

    NON-OWNED AIRCRAFT LIABILITY

    Coverage for productions hiring aircraft and operators they don't own — protecting the production company against aviation exposure.

  • 4

    FILMING FROM AIRCRAFT

    Coverage extension when crew or talent are aboard aircraft for camera work or as on-screen passengers.

  • 5

    EXTERNAL LOAD OPERATIONS

    Helicopter operations with external camera loads, slung equipment, or specialty rigging — separate underwriting category.

  • 6

    COORDINATION WITH PRODUCTION

    Aerial coverage coordinated with the broader production insurance program — including liability, equipment, and excess limits.

DRONE & AERIAL FAQ

QUESTIONS AERIAL OPERATORS ASK

DO I NEED INSURANCE TO FLY A DRONE COMMERCIALLY FOR FILM?
For most film productions — yes, in practice. Even when drone insurance isn't strictly required by the FAA itself, virtually every professional film production, location agreement, equipment rental house, and additional-insured contract requires proof of drone coverage before the operator is allowed to fly. Most working aerial cinematographers carry coverage as a baseline operating cost.
WHAT IS FAA PART 107?
FAA Part 107 is the federal regulatory framework governing commercial small unmanned aircraft operations in the United States. It covers remote pilot certification, operating rules, equipment requirements, and operational categories like flight over people, night operations, and beyond visual line of sight. Carriers writing commercial drone film coverage typically expect Part 107 certification for the remote pilot in command.
DOES MY HOMEOWNERS OR BUSINESS POLICY COVER COMMERCIAL DRONE WORK?
Almost never. Personal homeowners insurance, generic small-business policies, and standard film production package policies typically exclude or significantly limit aerial operations. Commercial drone film work generally requires a separate aviation-specialty policy or a specifically endorsed aerial extension.
HOW MUCH DOES DRONE FILM INSURANCE COST?
Pricing depends on the hull value of the drone, the type of operations being conducted, the operator's experience and credentials, and whether the policy is project-based or annual. Cinema-grade drones with premium payloads price differently than compact prosumer drones. Submit the intake form with your aerial details for a real number on your specific situation.
WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HULL AND LIABILITY COVERAGE?
Hull coverage protects the aircraft itself — drone, helicopter, or fixed-wing — and its mounted payload from physical damage. Liability coverage protects against third-party claims arising from the operation, including injuries or property damage the aircraft causes. Most professional aerial programs include both.
CAN ONE POLICY COVER DRONES AND HELICOPTERS BOTH?
Sometimes — for operators or production companies running both. More often, drone coverage and manned aerial coverage are separate policy lines because they're underwritten differently and often by different carriers within the aviation specialty space.
DO I NEED A SEPARATE POLICY FOR FLIGHT OVER PEOPLE OR AT NIGHT?
Not necessarily a separate policy, but the underwriting requirements expand. Night operations, flight over people, flight over moving vehicles, and BVLOS operations typically require specific FAA waivers or category approvals, plus additional documentation for the carrier — and sometimes higher premiums.
CAN I GET ANNUAL DRONE COVERAGE INSTEAD OF PROJECT-BASED?
Yes — annual policies are common for working aerial cinematographers and production companies running drone operations year-round. Project-based coverage is more common when drone work is one component of a broader feature production, and may be coordinated with a DICE annual policy on the production side.

CAMERAS IN THE AIR. COVERAGE THAT FOLLOWS.

From Part 107 commercial drone work to helicopter aerial cinematography to fixed-wing camera platforms — placed through aviation-specialty markets that underwrite aerial production every day. Submit the intake form with your aerial details and we'll move on it today.