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FAA Part 107 Waiver Log

Track every FAA permission request — reference, zone, validity window and status — with expiry badges and audit-ready export.

The waiver's special provisions ARE the law for your operation: every provision (training, observers, equipment, reporting) is auditable, and waiver renewals scrutinise your compliance record.

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Requests logged
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Approved
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No entries yet — add your first one above. Data stays in your browser.

⚠️ Not for operational decisions. This is a record-keeping and planning aid only — not certified avionics, not a source of regulatory truth. Always verify against official sources (FAA) and your operator's approved documents before flying.

Free faa part 107 waiver log: every authorization with its reference, window, conditions and status on one badge-watched board — the compliance trail FAA operations are audited on.

About FAA Part 107 Waiver Log

Regulators grant permissions; operators must PROVE them — months later, to clients, insurers and inspectors. Under FAA: part 107 waivers authorize operations the rule otherwise prohibits — bvlos (107.31), over people beyond categories (107.39), above 400 ft (107.51) — each with special provisions that function as your personal regulation. Mind the trap: the waiver's special provisions are the law for your operation: every provision (training, observers, equipment, reporting) is auditable, and waiver renewals scrutinise your compliance record. Each entry here captures the grant's reference, scope and window with a status badge, so the proof is one search away, forever.

How to use FAA Part 107 Waiver Log

  1. 1Log each permission request as you submit it, with reference and window.
  2. 2Update status as it's approved, flown, or expires.
  3. 3Export the history for audits, client onboarding and renewals.

Why use FAA Part 107 Waiver Log?

  • Built for the FAA permission lifecycle
  • Reference + zone + validity window + status per request
  • Badges flag rejected, expired and still-pending requests
  • Encodes the trap: the waiver's special provisions are the law for your operation
  • CSV export = your authorization history for audits and renewals

Frequently asked questions

How do Part 107 waiver provisions work in practice?+

Each waiver arrives with special provisions — required procedures, equipment, training records, sometimes reporting — and those provisions carry regulatory force for your operations under it. The FAA can request evidence of compliance, and renewal applications effectively audit your own record-keeping. That's why operators log every waiver flight against its waiver number with the provisions met; this log's structure (reference, window, conditions, status) mirrors exactly that need.

How long should drone permission records be kept?+

At least as long as the longest tail on the operation: insurance claim windows (years), client contract retention clauses, and regulator audit reach. Three years is a sensible floor; operators under waivers or operational authorizations keep records for the life of the authorization plus its renewal cycle, because renewal reviews look backwards. Local storage plus monthly CSV archives covers all of it at zero cost.

Do I need an account or internet connection?+

No account and no connection are needed once the page has loaded — records live in local storage on your device and every calculation runs in your browser. Data doesn't sync between devices, so export the CSV when you want to move or archive your records.

Can I export these records for an audit?+

Yes — one click exports your complete authorization history as a CSV file that opens in Excel, Google Sheets or Numbers. The export preserves every column exactly as entered, so you can print it, attach it to paperwork, or hand it to an inspector, buyer or insurance underwriter as a supporting summary alongside your official records.

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