Minnesota
Minnesota Drone Laws (2026): Police Warrants, Privacy, and Reporting

Minnesota law enforcement faces one of the country's strictest drone-warrant statutes, with bans on facial recognition and protest surveillance without a warrant, plus mandatory public reporting. Civilian drone disputes fall under general trespass, nuisance, and Minnesota's interference-with-privacy statute rather than a dedicated civilian drone law.
Jurisdiction scope: This article addresses drone law in Minnesota under the state's law-enforcement UAV warrant statute (Minn. Stat. § 626.19), general trespass and interference-with-privacy law, hunting-related restrictions, and the federal FAA and shoot-down framework that applies nationwide. It does not cover FAA flight-operation rules in depth or drone law in other states; see the drone laws by state hub for other jurisdictions.
How the FAA and Minnesota Law Divide Authority Over Drones
Federal law treats every drone as an aircraft, putting flight altitude, pilot certification, airspace authorization, and Remote ID broadcast under the Federal Aviation Administration's exclusive authority nationwide (14 CFR Part 107 for commercial and government flights, 49 U.S.C. § 44809 for recreational flights). Minnesota cannot and does not regulate where in the sky a drone may fly. What Minnesota regulates instead, more comprehensively than most states, is when and how law enforcement may use a drone at all, plus general conduct rules like trespass, privacy, and hunting interference that apply to any resident's drone. The FAA's 2023 fact sheet on state and local UAS regulation confirms this division nationally; see the drone laws by state hub for how other states draw the same line.

Does Police Need a Warrant to Fly a Drone in Minnesota?
Minnesota imposes one of the country's more protective law enforcement drone statutes. Under Minn. Stat. § 626.19, subd. 2, a law enforcement agency must not use a UAV without a search warrant, except under 11 enumerated circumstances listed in subdivision 3: emergencies involving a risk of death or bodily harm, evidence at imminent risk of destruction, public events with a heightened safety risk, credible terrorism intelligence, natural or man-made disaster response, threat assessments before a specific event, reasonable suspicion of criminal activity in a public area, crash reconstruction on public roads, officer training or public relations with consent, a government entity's written request for a non-law-enforcement purpose, and active searches for a missing person.
The statute goes further than most states' warrant rules in two respects. Subdivision 4(b) bars a Minnesota law enforcement agency from equipping a drone with facial-recognition or other biometric-matching technology unless a warrant expressly authorizes it. Subdivision 4(d) separately bars using a drone to collect data on a public protest or demonstration unless a warrant or listed exception applies. Both provisions target uses of drone surveillance that concerned civil-liberties advocates well beyond the basic search-and-seizure question, and few other states have codified either restriction.
Minnesota's Drone Transparency Requirement: What the Annual Reports Show
Minnesota is also unusual in requiring every agency that maintains or uses a drone to publicly account for its warrantless use every year. Under Minn. Stat. § 626.19, subd. 12, each agency must report to the Department of Public Safety by January 15 the number of warrantless UAV deployments from the prior year, the date and authorized reason for each one, and the total cost of its drone program; the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension then compiles a statewide report for the legislature, published by June 15.
The 2025 compilation, released June 15, 2026, gives a concrete picture of how often this happens. Minnesota law enforcement agencies reported 9,080 warrantless UAV deployments statewide in 2025, up 38 percent from 6,603 in 2024, while total statewide spending on drone programs was $1,312,332.76, down 33 percent from $1,973,337.63 the year before. Rochester Police Department was the state's single largest user, with 1,009 warrantless deployments, followed by the Minnesota State Patrol (633) and Minnetonka Police Department (611). Few other states publish this level of agency-by-agency deployment detail.
Can My Neighbor Legally Fly a Drone Over My Property in Minnesota?
Minnesota has not enacted a dedicated civilian drone-privacy statute the way California, Texas, or Florida have, so a resident's options against a neighbor's drone rest on general law. Trespass and private nuisance claims can address a drone that repeatedly flies low over a property or interferes with its use and enjoyment. Where a drone is used to surreptitiously watch or record someone, Minnesota's interference-with-privacy statute, Minn. Stat. § 609.746, fills the gap: it is a gross misdemeanor, escalating to a felony for a minor victim or a repeat offense, to surreptitiously gaze, photograph, or record a person in a place, including through a window or other aperture of a dwelling, where they have a reasonable expectation of privacy and with intent to intrude on that privacy. A drone hovering to film into a backyard or window can fall squarely within that statute even though it does not mention drones by name.
Hunting, Fishing, and Wildlife Drone Restrictions
Minnesota treats drones like any other motor vehicle for hunting and fishing purposes: the Department of Natural Resources applies the state's ban on using a motor vehicle to drive, chase, or take a wild animal to drones as well, which means a drone cannot be used to scout, locate, track, drive, or recover game. Wildlife Management Areas separately prohibit any drone operation that chases, herds, scares, or disturbs wildlife without an area manager's permit. Apart from the DNR's vehicle-based interpretation, Minn. Stat. § 97A.037 makes it a misdemeanor to intentionally disturb or interfere with someone who is lawfully hunting, trapping, or angling.
Can You Shoot Down a Drone Over Your Property in Minnesota?
As in every other state, disabling or shooting down a drone over Minnesota property is a federal felony regardless of how unwelcome the flight is. The FAA classifies drones as aircraft within the National Airspace System, so 18 U.S.C. § 32 applies: willfully damaging, destroying, or disabling a drone carries up to 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000, plus loss of Second Amendment rights under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) upon conviction. This holds even over a Minnesotan's own backyard, because the FAA, not the landowner, controls the airspace. No state, Minnesota included, has passed a law giving a property owner the right to shoot down a drone.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Minnesota require a warrant for police to fly a drone?
Yes. Minn. Stat. § 626.19 requires a search warrant for law enforcement drone use, with 11 narrow statutory exceptions for emergencies, missing-person searches, and similar circumstances.
Can Minnesota police use facial recognition with a drone?
Only with a warrant that expressly authorizes it. Minn. Stat. § 626.19, subd. 4(b), bars equipping a drone with facial-recognition or biometric-matching technology otherwise.
Can Minnesota police use a drone to monitor a protest?
Not without a warrant or an applicable statutory exception. Minn. Stat. § 626.19, subd. 4(d), bars using a drone to collect data on a public protest or demonstration otherwise.
How many times did Minnesota police use drones without a warrant in 2025?
Statewide agencies reported 9,080 warrantless drone deployments in 2025, according to the Department of Public Safety's legislative report published June 15, 2026, up 38 percent from 2024.
Does Minnesota have a civilian drone-privacy law?
Not a dedicated one. Civilian disputes generally proceed under trespass, nuisance, and Minnesota's interference-with-privacy statute, Minn. Stat. § 609.746, which covers surreptitious observation or recording using a device.
Can I use a drone while hunting in Minnesota?
No. The Department of Natural Resources treats drones as motor vehicles for game-and-fish purposes, so using one to scout, locate, drive, or recover game is prohibited.
Can I legally shoot down a drone over my property in Minnesota?
No. Disabling or destroying a drone is a federal felony under 18 U.S.C. § 32 regardless of Minnesota law or where the drone is flying.
Sources and References
- Minn. Stat. § 626.19 (unmanned aerial vehicles; law enforcement)(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minn. Stat. § 609.746 (interference with privacy)(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minn. Stat. § 97A.037 (harassment of hunters, trappers, and anglers)(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, Legislative Report: 2025 Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (June 15, 2026)(assets.dps.mn.gov).gov
- Minnesota DNR, Drone Use While Hunting(files.dnr.state.mn.us).gov
- 18 U.S.C. § 32 (destruction of aircraft or aircraft facilities)(law.cornell.edu)
- FAA, State and Local Regulation of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) fact sheet(faa.gov).gov