In Latvia, A1/A3 is not a catch-all “camera-drone licence”. It is the qualification the CAA wants you to have for certain Open-category flights.
When A1/A3 is actually required
The Latvian CAA page for the online course says you need A1/A3 training and the exam before you fly if the drone:
- has a C1, C2, C3 or C4 class mark, or
- weighs 250 g or more
That is the main legal line.
If you fly a drone under 250 g, the rule is narrower:
- a camera can still mean you must do operator registration
- but a camera alone does not make A1/A3 mandatory
So before you assume you need A1/A3, split it into three questions:
- Do I need operator registration?
- Do I need pilot qualification?
- Which subcategory will I fly in?
Before you start
The CAA names one practical requirement for the Latvian A1/A3 course:
- a Latvian remote-pilot number in the portal
So the usual order is:
- register at
e.caa.gov.lv - get the operator and pilot registrations you need
- then start the A1/A3 course
What the course covers
The official online course is free and has no time limit. The published syllabus has nine topics:
- air safety
- airspace limitations
- aviation regulation
- human performance limitations
- operational procedures
- general UAS knowledge
- privacy and data protection
- insurance
- security
Exam format
The public CAA page says:
- 40 minutes
- 40 questions
- at least 75% correct to pass
Once you pass, the certificate shows up in the CAA UAS information system. It is valid for 5 years and recognised across the European Union.
What A1/A3 covers
A1/A3 covers the two Open-category subcategories named on the certificate:
- A1 — lighter aircraft and stricter rules around people who are not part of the flight
- A3 — flights far from bystanders and at least
150 mfrom residential, commercial, industrial, or recreational areas
If you plan to fly closer to people with a C2 drone, that is A2, not A1/A3 on its own.
A2 is a separate step
The Latvian CAA treats A2 as its own process:
- a valid A1/A3 certificate first
- then practical self-training
- then a separate A2 exam
So passing A1/A3 does not clear you to fly A2.
How to prepare without wasting time
Most people don't lose points on rare aviation details. They lose them on the Open-category basics they skim too fast.
Spend your time on:
- the difference between operator and remote pilot
- when registration is required
- VLOS and FPV limits
- the 120 m height limit
- the distance rules for A1, A2, A3
- Latvian geographical zones
If you can explain these rules in your own words, you're usually preparing the right way.
Your next step
A1/A3 is one stop on a longer path. If you're still deciding which certificate your drone actually needs, the category checker answers it in a few questions, and the full route from buying a drone to a prepared first flight is laid out in the step-by-step guide. When you're ready, the online course covers the full A1/A3 syllabus — then see exactly what the A1/A3 exam looks like.



