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Flat-lay desk scene with a Latvian flag pin, an official envelope with subtle "CAA" embossing, a printed form with stamped boxes, a fountain pen, a smartphone showing a portal screen, a small drone in one corner.

2026-05-14· updated 2026-05-15

CAA Latvia for drones — contacts, fees, and processes

If you need a current contact, a confirmed fee, or the right place to report something, go to the official CAA sources first. This page is a practical map to those sources, not a replacement for them.

Main CAA contact details

The official CAA contact page lists:

  • Address: Biroju iela 10, Lidosta Rīga, Mārupes novads, LV-1053
  • General phone: +371 67830936
  • General email: caa@caa.gov.lv
  • Working hours: Monday to Friday 08:00–12:00 and 12:30–16:30

For drone questions, the dedicated contact is:

  • Email: droni@caa.gov.lv
  • Drone portal: droni.caa.gov.lv
  • Self-service portal: e.caa.gov.lv

On the drone contact page, the CAA also lists phone numbers by topic: registration, qualifications, geographical zones, and Specific-category operations. If your question isn't urgent, email is usually the best route because it leaves a written record.

Fees that are clearly published

The public CAA pages currently say:

  • UAS operator registration: 5 EUR
  • Remote-pilot portal registration: free
  • A1/A3 online course and exam: free
  • A2 exam at the CAA: 15 EUR for the first attempt, 10 EUR for a retake

The A2 page also notes that recognised organisations may set their own prices. So if you sit the exam somewhere other than the CAA itself, check the price with the provider before you book.

What not to treat as a fixed rule

For other paid services, especially in the Specific category, don't rely on old blog tables, forum screenshots, or copied price lists. Check:

  1. the official CAA tariff page
  2. the page for the specific service
  3. the current list of recognised organisations, if the service is handled by them

This matters because fees, lists of providers, and how you apply do change.

Exams and qualification

If you want to fly in the Open category, the practical order is simple:

  • start with operator registration
  • if your drone or operation needs it, do A1/A3
  • if you need A2, decide whether to sit it with the CAA directly or through a recognised organisation

The official qualification pages beat second-hand summaries, because they show the current prerequisites, exam language, and certificate validity.

Reporting incidents

For safety occurrences, the CAA materials point pilots to:

  • https://e.caa.gov.lv/incidents
  • https://e2.aviationreporting.eu/reporting

The point of reporting an occurrence is to improve safety, not to find someone to blame. The public CAA guidance also separates mandatory reporting from voluntary reporting.

Best way to check the current version

When you need today's answer, check in this order:

  1. caa.gov.lv for official contacts and tariffs
  2. droni.caa.gov.lv for drone rules, qualifications, insurance, and geographical zones
  3. e.caa.gov.lv for the actual registration, qualifications, certificates, and incident forms

Starting from zero? Begin with our Latvia registration guide, then move on to the A1/A3 overview.

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