In Latvia, drone insurance is not a simple yes-or-no based only on whether the flight is “commercial”. The binding answer comes from the current Latvian insurance rules and the matrix the CAA publishes for drone operations.
What the mandatory insurance covers
The CAA guidance is about third-party civil liability. In plain terms, that means damage caused to:
- other people
- other people's property
- the environment, where relevant
It is not the same as insuring your own drone. Damage to your aircraft, your payload, or your lost business is a separate question.
The Latvian minimums are not one flat number
The public CAA insurance page does not boil everything down to one universal figure. It publishes a matrix by category, class, and mass.
A simplified reading of the current CAA table:
| Operation | Current minimum on the CAA table |
|---|---|
Open category A1 with <250 g or C0 | no minimum listed |
Open category with C1 / C2, and A3 operations below 20 kg | 50,000 EUR |
Open category A3 with 20–25 kg aircraft | 750,000 SDR |
Specific category from 250 g to 500 kg | 750,000 SDR |
If your operation sits near a boundary, check the official CAA page directly instead of relying on generic EU summaries.
Why this matters
Two common mistakes cause trouble:
- assuming “hobby” automatically means “no insurance needed”
- assuming one EU-wide number applies to every drone case in Latvia
The Latvian CAA material is more specific than that. The minimum depends on the operation and the aircraft.
What to check before buying a policy
Before you treat a policy as enough, confirm:
- that it is third-party liability cover
- the territorial scope
- the liability limit
- whether the policy matches the way you actually fly
That last point matters especially if you fly across different countries or move from simple Open-category flights to more demanding work.
Flying abroad
The CAA also reminds operators to check the destination country before flying abroad. For lighter drones, insurance requirements are not identical across all European states.
So the safe rule is:
- check Latvia for flights in Latvia
- check the destination country before cross-border flights
A practical way to handle insurance
If your operation needs mandatory insurance, keep the policy details together before you fly:
- insurer name
- policy number
- validity dates
- liability limit
That saves time when you register, update your paperwork, or explain your setup after an incident.
Need the legal basics around qualification first? See our A1/A3 guide.



