To Fly a Drone in the U.S., You Now Must Pass FAA's TRUST Test

New drone rules for recreational pilots

By Evan Ackerman  
https://spectrum.ieee.org/automaton/robotics/drones/all-recreational-drone-pilots-must-now-past-the-faas-trust-test

For years, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has been shuffling 
its way towards some semblance of regulation of the enormous number of drones 
now in the hands of recreational pilots in the United States.

The fact that anyone can run out and buy a cheap drone at a nearby store, 
charge the battery, and launch the thing has got to be stupendously annoying 
for the FAA. One of their jobs, after all, is to impress upon people that drone 
owners doing something like that is not always a sensible thing to do.

Perhaps coming to terms with its unfortunate (albeit quite necessary) role as a 
bit of a buzzkill, the FAA has been desperately trying to find ways of forcing 
recreational drone pilots to at least read the rules they’re supposed to be 
following, without resorting to a burdensome new regulatory infrastructure.

Their strategy seems to be something like, “we’re going to require drone pilots 
to do a couple of things, but those things will be so painless that nobody can 
possibly object.”

The first of those things is registering your drone if it weighs more than 0.55 
pound, and the second of those things, just announced this week, is the TRUST 
testing requirement for all recreational drone pilots who fly drones.

Everyone passes with a 100 percent A+

The FAA’s TRUST Test, which stands for The Recreational U(A)S Safety Test… 
Test… is mandatory for all pilots flying drones recreationally, no matter the 
size or weight of the drone being flown.

Understanding how annoying this could potentially be, the FAA (to its credit) 
is asking for very nearly the minimal amount possible from pilots:

TRUST is online, it’s free, it takes less than 30 minutes start to finish, the 
certificate it provides you with never expires, it’s multiple choice, and it’s 
impossible to fail.

By impossible to fail, I mean literally impossible. It’s not just that the 
questions are easy (and they are very, very easy), but if you miss one, you’re 
immediately presented with an option to try again, and you can’t proceed 
without answering correctly. Everyone passes with a 100 percent A+.

About half of the test is just providing you with information, and the other 
half is asking questions about the information you’ve just been provided with. 
If you’ve been flying a drone recreationally already, it’s all stuff you should 
know (how to make sure you’re not flying in restricted airspace, that sort of 
thing) and if you don’t know the answers already, you really shouldn’t have 
been flying.

Note that if you’re flying in any capacity that’s not strictly for fun 
(including work where you do get paid, work where you don’t get paid, community 
journalism, and so on), you’ll still need to get your Part 107 license.

The FAA isn’t administering the test itself—there are a bunch of FAA Approved 
Test Administrators, each of which is authorized to offer TRUST and provide 
certification through their websites. Folks like The Academy of Model 
Aeronautics, The Boy Scouts of America, and Pilot Institute are just some of 
the organizations through which you can access TRUST, and the complete list is 
here.

Each one will give you the same test. Wherever you go, you won’t have to 
register or provide any information about yourself or your drones, with the 
exception of your name right at the end of the test so that they can put it on 
your digital certificate. You’re supposed to keep the certificate on you when 
you fly (a digital copy is fine), and it’s worth remembering that law 
enforcement is allowed to ask you for it.

TRUST

After you’ve aced TRUST, it’s important to remember all of the other stuff you 
have to do to safely and legally fly a recreational drone. Notably, TRUST is 
separate from registration—you have to complete this test before you fly, full 
stop, whether your drone is registered or not.

Also, you’ll need to:

Follow the safety guidelines of a Community Based Organization (CBO)
Keep your drone in your visual line of sight (VLOS)
Always give way and never interfere with manned aircraft
Get an airspace authorization before flying in controlled airspace
Do not fly higher than 122 m (400 feet) above the ground in uncontrolled 
airspace
Mark your drone with its registration number

This is all easy stuff. The question is whether the FAA can convince people to 
actually do it. There’s really not all that much preventing drone pilots from 
totally ignoring everything that the FAA is trying to do here, except for some 
nebulous potential penalties if you do something especially bad and get caught.

Living within the Washington D.C. no-fly zone, I see plenty of drones, and 
there’s no way of telling whether the pilots don’t know about the rules that 
they’re breaking, or don’t care. Personally, I’m a huge proponent of safe and 
responsible drone use, and I very much hope that TRUST will make a difference.
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