FCC Issues Public Notice on April 1 Seeking Drone Spectrum and Regulatory Comments[1][3]

Published
Score
3

Why it matters

On April 1, 2026, the FCC's Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) and Office of Engineering and Technology (OET) released Public Notice DA 26-314, titled “Unleashing American Drone Dominance,” soliciting public comments on regulatory reforms to boost U.S. drone (UAS), eVTOL, and counter-UAS technologies. Comments are due May 1, 2026, and replies by May 18.[1][2][4] The notice seeks input on streamlining equipment authorization and siting rules, expanding spectrum access for testing and operations (e.g., beyond current unlicensed bands like 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.8 GHz), modernizing experimental licensing, facilitating U.S. firm investments, providing manufacturing clarity, and aligning policies with national security to counter foreign drones.[1][4][9][11]

Key players include FCC Chair Brendan Carr, who emphasized cutting red tape and securing the domestic supply chain; President Trump's administration via executive orders; WTB and OET; and agencies like the rebranded Department of War (DOW, formerly DoD), DHS, and FAA. U.S. manufacturers and innovators are targeted beneficiaries, while foreign firms like DJI face barriers after the FCC added all foreign-made UAS and components to its Covered List in December 2025, prohibiting new authorizations (with limited exemptions).[1][4][5][9] This follows DoD determinations of national security risks and conditional approval processes for vetted products.[11]

The action implements Trump's June 6, 2025, executive orders “Unleashing American Drone Dominance” and “Restoring American Airspace Sovereignty,” directing agencies to prioritize domestic production, reduce foreign reliance, and accelerate approvals—evidenced by 227 UAS and 8 counter-UAS experimental licenses since January 2025, a 68% increase.[2][3][4][8] Prior steps include August 2024 Part 88 rules for 5030-5091 MHz spectrum and December 2025 Covered List updates.[9][11]

Newsworthy now amid ongoing Trump “America-first” aviation push, as the comment period (open until May) could drive rulemakings on spectrum, licensing, and drone ecosystems, especially after DJI's February 2026 lawsuit challenging the Covered List and with exemptions expiring January 2027.[4][8][11] It advances U.S. supremacy in drones amid global competition and security concerns.[1][3]

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