On the 1st of May this year, the city of Beijing implemented a new drone law, called the Beijing Unmanned Aircraft Management Regulations.
Widely considered to be the strictest of its kind in China, the new law effectively establishes the entire city as a controlled operating zone for drones.
Restrictions include the following:
· Flights: The law designates Beijing's entire administrative area as controlled airspace. This means all outdoor drone flights will require prior approval from air traffic authorities, and there is no "open" area where you can fly without permission. To accommodate necessary activities, specialised flight zones may be designated (such as in Yanqing District) for needs like education, research, and agriculture.
· Sales and Transport: It is now illegal to sell or rent drones or their core components to any individual or entity within Beijing. E-commerce platforms must enforce this ban as well. Additionally, you cannot transport or carry drones or their core components into Beijing, with a single exception: owners who have completed the mandatory registration and verification process may carry their own drones out of and back into the city
· Storage: New drone storage facilities are banned citywide. No storage facilities are allowed inside the 6th Ring Road. Outside this zone, they must meet strict safety standards and pass a police evaluation. "Storage facility" is defined as any single location holding more than three drones or more than ten core components. Owners can store three or fewer drones at home without meeting these requirements.
· Registration and Verification: All drone owners must complete a national real-name registration. Additionally, they must complete a local "information verification" with the police by July 31, 2026. This can be done by visiting or calling your local police station or requesting an officer visit your home.
The law includes exceptions for specific needs. Purchases, transport, and storage are permitted for counter-terrorism, disaster relief, education, research and development, agriculture, and sports. However, these applications require special approval and a safety assessment by the authorities.
China is one of the world’s largest drone markets. After industry leader DJI made major technological breakthroughs in 2012, drones quickly became entertainment gadgets for the masses, driving explosive growth in the consumer market.
According to a report released in November 2025 by China Business Industry Research Institute, the size of China’s consumer drone market grew from 33.5 billion RMB (US$4.9 billion) in 2020 to 45.8 billion RMB in 2024, a compound annual growth rate of 8.15 percent.
In 2025, the market size hit 50.2 billion RMB.
With the rapid market expansion, the problem of “black flights” worsened. Black flights refer to drone operations carried out without approval, qualifications or real-name registration, in restricted airspace, sensitive areas or at prohibited altitudes.
Chengdu Shuangliu Airport encountered nine such black flight incidents in April 2017, forcing more than 100 flights to divert, turn back or be delayed.
And with more and more people purchasing drones in the country, it is no wonder Beijing may be getting antsy. The government is worried that the proliferation of drone acquisitions – with three million people owning drones in the country – is becoming a threat to the security of the capital.
Which leads us to the law commencing May 1.
“I thought it was a scam call, then I realised it was the police station asking about my drone,” said Liu Xiang, a drone enthusiast from Chongqing, describing the first time he received a call from the authorities about his DJI Mini 4.
Liu told Lianhe Zaobao (LHZB) that while on a business trip to Cangxi county in March, he received a call from an unfamiliar number. After several rounds of questioning, he realised it was the Chongqing Police asking whether he owned a drone and requesting that he report to the station in person to leave an official record.
He had acquired a DJI Mini 4 Pro in 2024, and the last time he flew it was in Xinjiang in August 2025.
Many Chinese netizens have recently taken to social media to share similar experiences: On the e-commerce platform RedNote, the most highly engaged posts under tags such as “real-name registration”, “drone”, and “DJI drones” largely centred on police phone calls requesting that owners register their drones.
Then on 1 May 2026, authorities in Beijing implemented one of the most comprehensive and stringent drone control regimes ever seen in a major global city.
Sweeping far beyond traditional aviation regulations, the new rules restrict not merely where unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) can be flown, but whether they can be bought, sold, stored, or even transported into the Chinese capital.
The policy represents a profound shift in urban drone management, effectively treating the devices less as consumer electronics and more as tightly controlled urban infrastructure.
The immediate retail impact of the legislation was stark. Under the new laws, the sale of drones and their key components to individuals and organisations within Beijing is strictly prohibited. In the days leading up to the ban, physical retailers scrambled to adapt to the shifting regulatory landscape.
At a flagship retail store operated by DJI situated in Beijing’s bustling Guomao commercial district, staff reported clearing their shelves of all drone products. This clearance encompassed everything from the affordable Neo series to the high-end Mavic models.
The impending deadline triggered a rush of consumers attempting to purchase backup devices and spare parts while they still could, leaving stores chronically low on stock. Furthermore, at least four official DJI stores in the capital proactively contacted potential clients, advising them to make necessary purchases or hardware upgrades before the sales ban took effect.
This retail freeze extends comprehensively into the digital sphere. Major Chinese e-commerce platforms, including Alibaba Group Holding’s Taobao marketplace and JD.com, have been forced to comply, permanently halting all drone sales and shipments to addresses within Beijing.
Transporting a drone into the city via courier, freight, or personal travel is now forbidden. Consequently, visitors and tourists have been issued a clear directive: do not bring drones into the capital under any circumstances.
In a striking illustration of the regulation’s depth, users who send their devices out of the city for maintenance can no longer have them couriered back; they must retrieve the repaired drones in person.
For the capital’s existing drone enthusiasts, the regulatory landscape has become an administrative labyrinth. China currently boasts more than three million registered drones, and the country has long been seen as the global epicentre of the UAV industry.
Those operating within Beijing’s borders are not exempt from the new strictures; they are mandated to complete real-name registration and undergo rigorous verification with public security authorities. Failure to navigate this process means that mere possession of an unregistered drone may be deemed non-compliant.
Crucially, the entire administrative boundary of Beijing — home to approximately 22 million residents — is now designated as controlled airspace. There is no longer any location within the municipality, whether a dense urban centre, a public park, or a rural outskirt, where recreational flight is automatically permitted.
All outdoor flights require prior approval, and users must successfully complete an online training session and pass a regulatory test to prove their competence.
The motivations behind this draconian framework are ostensibly rooted in public safety and national security. Chinese state media and local authorities highlight the rapid proliferation of drones as a unique hazard in a densely populated capital housing highly sensitive government sites and major public events.
Xiong Jinghua, a senior official in the Beijing Municipal People’s Congress, stated that the overarching goal is to strike the best balance between ensuring safety and fostering economic and technological progress. Exceptions to the sweeping rules remain scarce, strictly limited to officially approved operations for counter-terrorism and disaster relief.
However, industry analysts and media commentators suggest that commercial imperatives are an equally vital catalyst. China is aggressively championing its “low-altitude economy,” a strategic industrial priority encompassing delivery networks, agricultural UAVs, and passenger flying taxis.
Vehicles such as those developed by the aviation firm EHang are advancing rapidly, and officials foresee a future where these craft are integrated into daily life. This nascent sector is projected to generate in excess of two trillion yuan (approximately £217 billion) by 2035.
The reality of establishing a busy, automated airspace filled with thousands of commercial craft leaves little room for unpredictable recreational users. As Sky News technology editor Jurro Sen observed, the presence of unregulated pilots, or “cowboys,” flying consumer drones presents an unacceptable risk to both public safety and these new automated commercial networks.
Thus, the sweeping ban effectively clears the skies for corporate, industrial, and state-approved low-altitude traffic.
In a move that further distinguishes Beijing’s model from international norms, the city has introduced stringent oversight of “drone storage sites”.
These are defined as facilities where drones are housed in significant quantities or maintained for organised operations, such as distribution warehouses, fleet hubs for public safety operations, and research locations.
The municipality has comprehensively banned the establishment of any new storage sites across the city, whilst explicitly prohibiting them entirely within the Sixth Ring Road, the boundary encompassing Beijing’s dense urban core.
Where storage is permitted outside this central zone, operators are subjected to security reviews and must maintain detailed, accessible records of their inventory and access logs, which law enforcement can demand at any time.
When juxtaposed with Western regulatory frameworks, the severity of Beijing’s approach becomes glaringly apparent. In the United Kingdom and the United States, the focus of civil aviation authorities remains squarely on flight operations rather than the physical lifecycle and movement of the device.
American consumers, for example, are entirely free to purchase drones online, transport them across state lines, and store them at home or in commercial facilities, provided they adhere to airspace restrictions when the device is airborne. Even large-scale, automated drone deployments for public safety in the US are governed through operational airspace compliance rather than outright logistical bans on hardware.
The imposition of these rules has fundamentally altered the cultural fabric of drone usage in China. Historically, the nation has dominated the global UAV market, with sprawling, intricately choreographed drone light shows even replacing traditional fireworks.
Yet, domestic hobbyists now find themselves effectively grounded, lamenting the loss of an accessible technological freedom.
Ultimately, Beijing’s comprehensive ban acts as a pioneering, albeit highly restrictive, case study in urban airspace management.
By implementing a layered enforcement mechanism of retail controls, transport bans, registration tracking, and facility oversight, the city aims to prevent unauthorised drone activity before a device ever takes off.
As global metropolises increasingly grapple with the integration of advanced air mobility and heightened security demands, the international community will be watching closely to see whether Beijing’s uncompromising model remains an outlier, or becomes the definitive blueprint for the cities of the future.
