Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
Drone roof inspections in France — even for private property — are typically treated as commercial operations. That means third‑party liability insurance is mandatory under EASA rules. Coverage protects you against property damage or injury claims, and annual premiums often start around €50–€150 for basic liability, climbing if you add hull (equipment) cover. Always verify your specific obligation with the DGAC or your insurer; a practical first step is to confirm your drone is in airworthy condition — something Reboot Hub helps with through its multi‑point bench test on every refurbished unit.
If you’re lifting a drone over rooftops in Marseille, Lyon, or a quiet village in Normandy, you’re probably focused on missing tiles and blocked gutters. What many private owners overlook is that French and European aviation authorities see this very differently from flying in a park. Even if no money changes hands, a roof inspection is a specific, deliberate operation with heightened third‑party risk — and that changes your insurance picture completely.
For operators who prefer to fly a pre‑owned DJI drone rather than buy new, Reboot Hub’s Shenzhen‑based technical team puts every unit through rigorous grading and bench‑testing, so you start from a known‑good platform. But airworthiness alone doesn’t meet the legal threshold; liability coverage is where you need to focus.
France, like all EU member states, follows the EASA Open and Specific category framework. In practice, most private roof inspections fall out of the Open category because:
For these reasons, the practical advice among experienced operators is to assume you need at least third‑party liability insurance as if you were a commercial pilot. A voluntary declaration or an operational authorization may also apply depending on the drone’s weight and the proximity of people. As always, check with the DSAC (the regional civil aviation safety directorate) or a qualified broker for your département.
A typical policy for private drone inspections separates into three layers. Understanding each helps you purchase the right protection without overspending.
| Coverage Type | What It Protects | Why It Matters on a Rooftop |
|---|---|---|
| Third‑party liability | Property damage and bodily injury to other persons | A gust of wind can push the drone into a neighbour’s solar panel, a skylight, or a passer‑by. This is the non‑negotiable layer. |
| Personal accident | Medical expenses or disability for you, the operator | Fallen roof debris or a sudden distraction can lead to injury on site. Some policies include this automatically. |
| Hull (equipment) cover | Physical loss or damage to the drone itself | A slip over a chimney or a bird strike can destroy your aircraft. Hull cover replaces or repairs it, often with a deductible. |
For private operators, a solid baseline is a high‑limit third‑party liability policy, with hull coverage added only if the drone’s value justifies the extra premium. Reboot Hub’s grading helps here: because you know your pre‑owned drone has been thoroughly inspected, you can make a more objective decision about whether hull cover is worth the cost.
Insurers don’t use a one‑size‑fits‑all pricing table — even for a seemingly straightforward roof inspection. The following factors normally influence the quote:
As of 2025, operators across France are reporting indicative annual prices that reflect these levers. A basic third‑party liability policy for a private individual inspecting roofs often lands in the €50–€150 range per year, while adding hull cover for a drone valued around €1,500–€3,000 might push the total to €300–€600 annually. These are broad estimates gathered from online broker snapshots and pilot forums; your own quote will differ based on the variables above. Always request a personalised proposal from at least two insurers.
Rather than reading every word of a 30‑page policy upfront, use the checklist table below. It distils the differences between entry‑level liability, enhanced liability, and full hull‑inclusive packages commonly encountered on the French market.
| Feature | Basic Third‑Party | Enhanced Liability | Comprehensive (Liability + Hull) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Third‑party property damage | ✔ Included | ✔ Included, often higher limit | ✔ Included |
| Bodily injury (third party) | ✔ Included | ✔ Included | ✔ Included |
| Coverage for flights over private land | ✔ Usually, with landowner consent | ✔ More flexible | ✔ Usually |
| Personal accident benefit | ✖ Rarely | ✔ Often included | ✔ Often included |
| Equipment damage/theft | ✖ Excluded | ✖ Excluded | ✔ Included, subject to deduction |
| Worldwide territorial scope | ✖ Typically France/EU only | ✖ Usually | ✔ May include limited worldwide |
| Ideal for | One‑off annual check | Regular but low‑risk work | High‑value drone, frequent inspections |
If you’d rather not do every check yourself — both on your insurance policy and on your drone — Reboot Hub’s refurbished units come ready‑graded so you can focus on the coverage, not the hardware.
Even though this guide centres on France, the same principles apply across multiple regions because many countries have adopted EASA‑aligned frameworks or have local equivalents. In Thailand, for instance, hotel‑event drone coverage and roof inspections fall under the CAAT’s new regulations, which generally require third‑party liability insurance for commercial use. Sweden treats real estate drone photography as a commercial activity under Transportstyrelsen’s rules, again making insurance mandatory. In Israel, real estate photography with a drone demands insurance per the CAAI and often a special permit. Mexico’s AFAC imposes similar obligations for beach film production and professional filming, with costs varying widely by region. Kenya, Ghana, Korea, Poland, and Peru each have unique landscapes — some require insurance for indoor inventory drones or agricultural work, while others are still clarifying their stance. Across all these countries, the safest path is to consult a local aviation authority or insurance broker. The rest of this FAQ addresses those specific queries directly.
Yes, commercial drone operations — including real estate photography — require liability insurance under Swedish regulations aligned with EASA. Even if you are shooting your own listing, the presence of third‑party structures, vehicles, and people makes insurance a practical necessity. Transportstyrelsen can provide the latest accepted minimum coverage amounts. Policies in Sweden typically start in the few‑hundred‑krona range per year for basic liability and go up substantially for hull cover. We recommend obtaining a quote that reflects your exact flight environment.
There is no fixed annual price for insuring a DJI Air 3S for film production in Mexico. AFAC rules treat professional filming as commercial activity, so at minimum you need third‑party liability. Annual premiums depend on the coverage limit, drone value, and the production’s location (beach shoots or urban shoots may increase rates). Operators have reported annual liability policies starting around a few hundred US dollars, with comprehensive packages reaching higher. Always contact a Mexican aviation insurer directly for a tailored quote.
Thailand’s CAAT now mandates third‑party liability insurance for any drone operation that can be considered commercial, which squarely covers hotel event coverage and private roof inspections. A policy should cover property damage, bodily injury, and ideally personal accident. Because events often involve large groups of people, many underwriters require higher limits. The exact cost will hinge on the venue, the drone type, and how frequently you fly. Check with a Thai‑registered broker for a binding quote — prices can move significantly year‑on‑year.
The CAAI requires liability insurance for all commercial drone photography, real estate included. You will likely also need a permit or operational approval from the authority, especially if you are flying over populated areas. Coverage should meet or exceed the statutory minimum for third‑party claims; this minimum has been discussed in the range of hundreds of thousands of shekels. Any quote must be validated through an Israeli insurance provider familiar with aviation policies, as the landscape changes frequently.
Peru’s drone regulations demand liability coverage for commercial agricultural work such as spraying, surveying, or monitoring. Insuring a DJI Mavic 3 Pro for this purpose will typically involve a higher premium than for photography because of the increased ground risk and possible chemical payload considerations. Operators have indicated annual policies in Peru can range from roughly US$200 to US$600 for liability‑only, but adding hull cover pushes that higher. A local broker who understands agrarian operations is your best source for an actual 2025 price.
Yes. South Korea’s drone law for enterprise operations — including indoor inventory drones, inspection, and media work — mandates liability insurance. Coverage limits are often tied to the drone’s weight and operational complexity. Budgeting can vary widely: a small enterprise flying a single unit might spend KRW 300,000–800,000 per year for basic coverage, while larger fleets with high‑value equipment should prepare for significantly higher figures. Direct consultation with a Korean aviation‑specialist insurer is essential, as requirements were updated throughout 2024.
Rules change, and no two insurance carriers evaluate risk identically. The most reliable strategy remains: document your operation, define the coverage you need, and approach at least two specialised insurers. And if the drone you’re insuring isn’t flight‑ready, even the best policy won’t help when a technical fault causes a mishap.
That’s where Reboot Hub’s standard makes a difference. Every pre‑owned DJI drone we sell is graded and bench‑tested by technicians operating out of China’s Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain, giving you a documented starting point before you ever lift off. Compare models, understand the grading, and pick a unit that fits your inspection workflow.
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