Romania drone flight guide
Drone flight in Transalpina: what to check before take-off
Quick verdict: can I fly a drone in Transalpina?
Last updated: (Romania time)
In Transalpina, as in any Romanian town, the exact take-off location decides whether the flight is allowed or needs extra steps. Distance from people, UAS zones, NOTAMs at the planned time, and purpose (recreation, filming, work) all matter.
In short
Yes, in Transalpina you can fly in many areas, but there are 10 restricted UAS zones nearby and 0 NOTAMs to check before each flight — your exact take-off point determines permission.
Frequently asked questions
- 10 UAS zones with restrictions or authorisation within ~30 km.
UAS restriction map — Transalpina
The map below is centred on Transalpina. Mark your exact take-off point and check UAS layers and NOTAMs for your planned interval.
Colours follow the ROMATSA map — see guide How to read the ROMATSA map for drones.
UAS zones (ROMATSA): imported at 10.06.2026 08:00 · NOTAM: imported at 10.06.2026 08:05
Relevant UAS zones near Transalpina
Areas that are often sensitive in Transalpina
Near urban centres you may find crowds, critical infrastructure, institutional sites, or parks with special rules. Even if a point looks clear at first glance, confirm UAS and NOTAM layers for the exact coordinates and planned time.
Map check in Drone Log
Set your date, time, and duration, pick your point in Transalpina on the airspace map, and see whether restricted zones or active NOTAMs appear. The result helps you decide whether you can operate, need clarification, or should postpone.
Filming, events, commercial work
Commercial operations, filming, or flights over assemblies may need more than recreational open-category flying. Prepare documents and contact competent authorities where required; Drone Log helps with forms and records, not automatic approvals.
NOTAM, airports and military zones
Check active NOTAMs on flight day and distance from airports, heliports or military perimeters around Transalpina. The ROMATSA UAS map remains the main source for permanent zones; NOTAMs may add temporary restrictions even when a point looks clear.
Useful guides
Related links
Drone Log helps you organise checks and documentation. It does not replace applicable regulations — verify official sources (NOTAM, PIB, UAS zones, ROMATSA, authorities) before every flight.