Ask most solo commercial drone pilots how they manage their flight records and you’ll get a familiar answer: a spreadsheet, a folder of PDFs, maybe a notebook from the field. It works — until it doesn’t.
Here’s when disorganized flight records actually cost you.
The Client Audit
A client calls. They want documentation of every flight you conducted on their property over the past two years — locations, dates, weather conditions, crew, equipment serial numbers. How long does it take you to produce that?
If the answer is “more than an hour,” you have a records problem.
Professional clients — utilities, construction companies, insurance firms — increasingly require detailed operational records as a condition of hiring UAS contractors. If you can’t produce clean documentation quickly, you lose the contract. Or you keep it and spend a weekend reconstructing logs from memory.
The Insurance Claim
An incident happens. Your insurer wants a complete operational record: the preflight checklist, the flight time, the conditions, who was on site. Gaps in your records don’t just slow down the claim — they can affect coverage.
The FAA Inquiry
Under 14 CFR Part 107, you’re required to make your aircraft available for inspection and to provide records upon FAA request. Having a clean, organized record of your operations isn’t just good practice — it’s a regulatory obligation.
What Good UAS Flight Records Look Like
A properly maintained flight record for each mission should capture:
- Date, time, and duration
- Location (GPS coordinates, not just a description)
- Aircraft make, model, and serial number
- Pilot in command name and certificate number
- Crew and visual observer information if applicable
- Weather conditions at time of flight
- Airspace authorization reference (LAANC or waiver number)
- Preflight inspection completion
- Any incidents or anomalies
- Post-flight notes
That’s a lot of data to manage in a spreadsheet. It’s nothing for purpose-built software.
Moving to Structured Flight Logging
The shift from ad-hoc record keeping to structured flight logging is one of the highest-leverage improvements a solo commercial operator can make. You do the same work — you just capture it in a system that makes it retrievable, reportable, and professional.
FlightDeck stores all of this in a local SQL database. You log the mission, the data is structured, and when a client or auditor asks for records, you pull a report instead of digging through folders.
Download the free 30-day trial and log your next mission in FlightDeck.
