SignedShoot

Drone property release with Part 107 language

An aerial property release that acknowledges Part 107 work and overflight considerations — for FAA-certified drone operators.

A drone property release showing Part 107 acknowledgment language

Aerial work the standard release ignores

Drone real estate has grown into its own discipline, and FAA Part 107 certifications have climbed alongside it. A drone operator photographing a property is doing something a ground photographer is not: flying a small aircraft, often over or near land that belongs to neighbors, capturing a view that takes in far more than the listed parcel.

A generic property release does not acknowledge any of that. It was written for a photographer standing inside a house with a camera. It says nothing about aerial capture, nothing about Part 107, and nothing about the airspace and overflight considerations that come with a drone job.

For a certified operator, handing a homeowner a release that ignores the aerial nature of the work is a small but real signal that the paperwork was not built for this kind of shoot. The release should reflect the job as it actually is.

A property release framed for aerial work

In SignedShoot, choose the property release type and the drone shoot framing. The release then adds aerial-specific language: an acknowledgment that the work is conducted under FAA Part 107, and wording that addresses overflight and the broader area an aerial frame captures.

Name the homeowner as the property owner, identify the address, and set the usage scope for portfolio, advertising, and listing use. The result is a release that reads as built for a certified drone operator — because it is — rather than a ground-photography form stretched to fit.

This matters most when the aerial images go into your own marketing. The Part-107-aware framing shows the homeowner and the agent that you understand the regulatory side of the work, which is itself a professional signal in a field where many operators are single-person businesses building a reputation. Unlock to get the editable .docx and a clean PDF; the watermarked preview is free and the property details stay in your browser.

Updated

Frequently asked questions

What does the drone framing add to the release?
Aerial-specific language: an acknowledgment that the work is conducted under FAA Part 107, plus wording addressing overflight and the wider area an aerial frame captures.
Is this a substitute for FAA Part 107 certification?
No. The release is a permission document for using the images. It acknowledges Part 107 work but does not replace the certification itself — you still need to be a certified operator.
Who signs a drone property release?
The owner of the property being photographed. The release clears the use of the property in your aerial images; it is not a flight authorization.
Does it cover neighboring land caught in the frame?
The release clears the named property. The overflight language acknowledges that aerial frames take in a wider area, but it is scoped to the property the owner controls.
Can I add my own operator details?
Yes. The unlocked release is an editable Word .docx, so you can add certification or operator-specific wording before the homeowner signs.

Generate this release

Free preview — the watermarked PDF is a complete document. Pay only to unlock the branded version.

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