Insurance confidence is not built by saying “our pilots are experienced”. It is built by proving how risk is controlled.
Drone insurance conversations are becoming more mature because drone operations are becoming more mature.
For professional operators, especially those working around infrastructure, public safety, construction, utilities or complex sites, insurers and clients are increasingly interested in how operations are controlled.
RPC-L1 can support that risk narrative, but only if it is part of a wider evidence system.
Why pilot competence matters to insurance confidence
Insurance is about risk.
A stronger risk-control story includes:
- Recognised pilot competence
- Current records
- Proper Operational Authorisation
- Suitable Operations Manual
- Aircraft maintenance
- Site risk assessments
- Clear emergency procedures
- Training records
- Incident reporting discipline
RPC-L1 contributes to that picture by giving a recognised remote pilot competence standard.
RPC-L1 is not the whole risk control
The CAA makes clear that RPCs do not cover every operational scenario on every UAS, and operators must ensure pilots have appropriate operational and UAS-specific training as well as the appropriate certificate.
That matters for insurance.
A pilot may be competent at a certificate level but still need additional training for:
- Heavy-lift aircraft
- Thermal payloads
- Survey payloads
- Confined or complex sites
- Night operations
- Industrial environments
- Public safety deployments
- Utilities inspections
- Site-specific emergency procedures
The better risk story is not “we have RPC-L1”. It is “we have RPC-L1 plus operating controls that match the work.”

What insurers and clients may want to understand
They may ask:
- Who is flying?
- What competence do they hold?
- Is the certificate current?
- What authorisation applies?
- What aircraft is being used?
- How is maintenance tracked?
- What site assessment is completed?
- What emergency procedures exist?
- How are incidents reported?
- Is insurance held in the right name?
The CAA’s Flying Drones for Work guidance says organisations must ensure remote pilots have the necessary qualifications and competency, applicable Operational Authorisations and insurance.
That triangle matters: competence, authorisation and insurance.
Why RPC-L1 helps internal risk management
RPC-L1 helps organisations create a common competence baseline.
That means leaders can:
- Standardise pilot requirements
- Reduce reliance on informal experience
- Track training gaps
- Build progression routes
- Strengthen client evidence
- Improve insurer confidence
- Reduce operational inconsistency
This is particularly valuable where multiple pilots fly across multiple locations.
The risk of weak training evidence
Weak evidence creates commercial drag.
It slows down procurement. It weakens tender responses. It creates uncertainty during insurance renewal. It makes internal audits harder. It makes post-incident reviews more uncomfortable.
The certificate matters. The evidence around the certificate matters more.

What an insurance-ready competence file should include
A strong file includes:
- Pilot certificates
- Flyer IDs
- Certificate expiry dates
- Flight logs
- Aircraft-specific training
- Operations Manual reference
- Operational Authorisation
- Maintenance records
- Site risk templates
- Emergency procedures
- Incident reporting process
- Insurance documentation
The CAA’s PDRA01 Operations Manual guidance includes many of these same operational controls, including insurance, responsibilities, qualification, role training, currency, competency, maintenance and logs.
FAQs
Do not assume that. Premium decisions are for insurers. What RPC-L1 can do is support a stronger competence and risk-control narrative.
Not on its own. Insurers may look at authorisation, operating procedures, aircraft, pilot experience, maintenance, incident history and scope of work.
Where appropriate, yes. Many clients want evidence that pilots are competent and operating properly.
It may be legally enough for a small operation, but commercially it can create a single point of failure.
If drones are material to revenue, safety or operational delivery, pilot competence should be visible at leadership level.
Coptrz can train pilots through RPC-L1 and help organisations understand how training fits into a wider operational control framework.
If you want stronger client, insurer and internal confidence in your drone operations, start by making pilot competence visible. Coptrz can help train your pilots through RPC-L1 and support a more defensible operating model.
Author bio:
Simon Harris is Managing Director of Coptrz, helping UK organisations build professional drone capability through training, compliance and operational support.
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