Delaware
Delaware Drone Laws (2026): Privacy & Penalties

Delaware's main drone statute bars flying over large events, critical infrastructure, or active emergency scenes, and bars using a drone to harass or invade someone's privacy on private property, but it exempts law enforcement entirely. A separate law makes drone-delivered prison contraband a felony.
Information last verified on 2026-07-09. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
Scope: This page covers Delaware state law on private drone use: the Section 1334 conduct restrictions, general privacy and voyeurism statutes as applied to drones, the prison-contraband felony, and local preemption. It does not cover FAA flight rules such as registration, Part 107 certification, or Remote ID. See our Drone Laws by State hub for how Delaware compares to states with a dedicated civilian drone-privacy statute.
What does Delaware's main drone statute actually prohibit?
Delaware's primary drone law, 11 Del. C. Section 1334, makes it unlawful to knowingly operate, direct, or program an unmanned aircraft system to fly over a sporting event, concert, automobile race, festival, or other event with more than 1,500 people in attendance; over critical infrastructure; or over an incident where first responders are actively engaged. The same section separately prohibits using a drone in a manner that subjects a person on private property to harassment, that invades a person's privacy on private property, or that violates a protective order.
The statute exempts several categories of use. A drone flying over property with the written permission of the owner or occupier is exempt, as is a drone operated by a college or university for educational purposes in FAA compliance, and a drone used for a commercial or other purpose by an operator authorized under FAA rules. A first violation is an unclassified misdemeanor, a second is a Class B misdemeanor, and any violation resulting in physical injury or property damage is a Class A misdemeanor.

Does Delaware law apply to law enforcement drone use?
Not through Section 1334. The statute exempts an unmanned aircraft system used for law-enforcement purposes from all of its prohibitions, including the harassment and privacy-invasion provisions that apply to everyone else. That makes Delaware's approach the opposite of the roughly dozen states that have passed a statute specifically requiring police to obtain a warrant before flying a drone; Delaware has no comparable requirement in its drone code.
That does not mean Delaware police operate free of any legal constraint. Ordinary Fourth Amendment search-and-seizure doctrine still applies to a police drone flight the same way it applies to any other government search, and a Delaware law-enforcement agency flying a drone for a government purpose must still comply with FAA Part 107 rules or hold a federal Certificate of Authorization. But a Delaware resident cannot point to a state statute the way a Florida, Illinois, or Minnesota resident can. See our Surveillance Camera Laws by State hub for how Delaware treats fixed camera surveillance by comparison.
Do Delaware's general privacy and voyeurism laws reach drone cameras?
Yes. Delaware has no civilian drone-privacy statute layered on top of Section 1334, but its general privacy offense was written broadly enough to reach any recording device, drones included. 11 Del. C. Section 1335, Violation of Privacy, criminalizes a list of acts: installing or using, without consent, a device to observe, photograph, record, or broadcast events or sounds in a private place; recording someone getting dressed or undressed, or exposing intimate body parts, without consent in a place where they would normally disrobe; and installing a GPS tracking device on someone's vehicle without consent, among others. Most violations are a Class A misdemeanor, with certain categories, including those involving deepfakes or paired personal information, elevated to a Class G felony.
Because these statutes turn on the conduct and the victim's reasonable expectation of privacy rather than on the type of camera used, a drone hovering at a window or over a fenced yard to capture that kind of image can trigger the same liability as a hidden camera or a peeping-Tom scenario. Delaware residents concerned about a neighbor's drone should look to these general statutes rather than expecting a drone-specific privacy law, since Delaware has not enacted one.
What is Delaware's prison-drone-contraband law?
House Bill 30, signed by Governor John Carney in August 2019 at the James T. Vaughn Correctional Center, amended Title 11 to make it a Class F felony to deliver or attempt to deliver contraband into any Delaware detention facility using a drone. The penalty reaches up to three years in prison and a $500,000 fine, among the more severe drone-specific penalties in Delaware law.
The law followed a documented pattern of drone incidents at James T. Vaughn, Delaware's largest prison, which went on lockdown after drone sightings on multiple occasions in 2018, including three consecutive nights in one stretch, with contraband discovered inside afterward. The legislation arrived roughly two years after Correctional Officer Lieutenant Steven Floyd was killed during a February 2017 inmate uprising and hostage situation at the same facility, an event that had already sharpened statewide attention on prison security before the drone incidents began.
Can a Delaware county or city pass its own drone ordinance?
No. Delaware law reserves drone regulation to the state itself: only the State may enact a law or take other action to prohibit, restrict, or regulate the testing or operation of unmanned aircraft systems, and this expressly preempts any county or municipal ordinance on the subject. A Delaware resident who wants a stricter local drone rule, such as a town-specific no-fly zone over a park, has no local government avenue to get one, because Section 1334 itself forecloses that option statewide.
Can I shoot down a drone flying over my property in Delaware?
No. Federal law makes it a serious felony to willfully damage, destroy, or disable any aircraft, and the FAA has classified drones as aircraft within the National Airspace System since 2012. Under 18 U.S.C. Section 32, a conviction carries up to twenty years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine, and it applies even over the shooter's own property, because the FAA, not the landowner, controls the airspace.
Publicized cases in which a shooter faced only reduced or dismissed state charges are not evidence of a legal right to shoot down a drone; they reflect prosecutorial and judicial discretion in individual cases, not a rule of law, and no state, including Delaware, has passed a statute authorizing a landowner to disable a drone over their own property. Self-help against a drone remains legally risky in Delaware as everywhere else.
Frequently asked questions
Disclaimer
This article provides general legal information about Delaware drone law as verified on 2026-07-09. It does not constitute legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Readers with a specific drone-related dispute or law-enforcement encounter should consult a lawyer licensed in Delaware.
Related articles
- Drone Laws by State: the complete hub
- Surveillance Camera Laws by State
- Is It Illegal to Record Someone in Public?
Last updated: 2026-07-09. Statutes cited reflect their in-force version as of 2026-07-09.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it illegal to fly a drone over my neighbor's property in Delaware?
Simply flying over private property is not automatically illegal under Delaware's Section 1334, but using the drone to harass someone on that property, invade their privacy, or violate a protective order is prohibited. Written permission from the property owner is also a defense the statute recognizes.
Does Delaware police need a warrant to fly a drone over my property?
Delaware has no statute requiring a warrant for police drone use. Section 1334 exempts law-enforcement operation from its restrictions entirely, so a police drone flight is governed by ordinary Fourth Amendment doctrine rather than a state statutory warrant requirement.
What happens if a drone drops contraband into a Delaware prison?
Under House Bill 30 (2019), delivering or attempting to deliver contraband into a Delaware detention facility by drone is a Class F felony, punishable by up to 3 years in prison and a $500,000 fine.
Can I record my neighbor with a drone in Delaware if they're outside?
It depends on whether they have a reasonable expectation of privacy in that moment and location. Delaware's general privacy statute, 11 Del. C. Section 1335, applies to any recording device, including a drone, used without consent to observe or record someone in circumstances where privacy is reasonably expected.
Can a Delaware town ban drones from flying over its parks?
No. Delaware law reserves all authority to regulate the testing or operation of unmanned aircraft systems to the state itself and preempts county and municipal ordinances on the subject.
Is it legal to shoot down a drone over my property in Delaware?
No. Shooting down any drone is a federal felony under 18 U.S.C. Section 32 regardless of where it is flying or who owns the land beneath it. No state, including Delaware, has authorized landowners to disable drones over their property.
Sources and References
- 11 Del. C. Section 1334 (Unlawful use of an unmanned aircraft system)(delcode.delaware.gov).gov
- 11 Del. C. Section 1335 (Violation of privacy)(delcode.delaware.gov).gov
- Delaware House Bill 30 (2019), 150th General Assembly, An Act to Amend Title 11 Relating to Unmanned Aircraft Systems(legis.delaware.gov).gov
- 18 U.S.C. Section 32 (Destruction of aircraft or aircraft facilities)(uscode.house.gov).gov
- Delaware Public Media, "New law makes dropping contraband into prisons from drones a felony"(delawarepublic.org)
- WMDT/47ABC, "Preventing contraband from being delivered by drones into Del. prisons" (Aug. 2019)(wmdt.com)