FAA awards State Farm with the first national waiver for drones

In March 2015, State Farm was the first insurance company to receive FAA permission to test drones for commercial use.

Previous waivers granted to State Farm were limited to a short time frame and to specific geographic areas impacted by hurricanes. (Photo: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)

State Farm has been granted the first national waiver to any company in the U.S. by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The national waiver allows the company to conduct drone operations over people and flights beyond the pilot’s visual line of sight through November 2022.

It’s been a team effort to make drone technology a reality,” Robert Yi, senior vice president for property & casualty claims, said in a press release. “The waiver will provide our claims specialist with another way to efficiently help customers. We can use drones to assess on-the-ground damage and deploy resources.”

Previous waivers State Farm was granted were limited to a short time frame and to specific geographic areas impacted by hurricanes. Current FAA regulations restrict pilots from flying drones beyond their visual line of sight and over groups of people. In a catastrophe situation, access to an impacted area may be challenged by water, debris and damage to infrastructure.

Related: Here’s how one new FAA regulation helps insurers

The timeline leading up to the first national waiver

Related: Flying high after catastrophes — drones provide critical ‘eyes’ to assess property damage

For more coverage like this, explore our Drones & insurance Instant Insights page.