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Israel's Flytrex Gets FAA Approval to Fly Over People in North Carolina

By: Isradrone Editorial Team⏱️ 3 min read
Flytrex הישראלית מקבלת אישור FAA לטוס מעל בני אדם בצפון קרוליינה

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has approved a request from Israeli startup Flytrex to expand its drone delivery service in Fayetteville, North Carolina, allowing its drones to fly directly over people for the first time. The approval widens the delivery radius and brings more than 2,000 homes in the area within reach, making the operation one of the largest drone delivery efforts ever documented in the United States.

From demo flights to a genuine neighborhood service

The FAA's new approval fundamentally changes the nature of the pilot program Flytrex launched with Walmart back in September 2020. Until now, it amounted to a limited demonstration along a narrow, predetermined route. With permission to fly over populated areas, the company is now shifting toward something closer to an on-demand neighborhood delivery service, a level of maturity that has few precedents in this still-young American market.

Flying over people is exactly the point where regulators around the world tend to draw the line. Fears of mechanical failure, dropped payloads, or loss of control over a populated area typically lead to strict limitations. An approval of this kind from the FAA, an agency known for its caution when it comes to integrating drones into civilian airspace, signals that the Israeli company presented safety data convincing enough to ease those restrictions.

How does a delivery actually get from the warehouse to the back porch?

Flytrex doesn't land in customers' yards. Its drones hover at a fixed altitude and lower deliveries by cable, a method designed to reduce operational risk and avoid the need for precise landings on private property. The service runs in partnership with Causey Aviation Unmanned, which handles the operational and regulatory side of the flights.

  • Average hover altitude: about 80 feet (roughly 24 meters)
  • Delivery method: payload lowered by cable, no landing
  • Households within the expanded service range: over 2,000
  • Retail partners: Walmart and local retailers in Fayetteville
  • Aviation partner: Causey Aviation Unmanned
  • Start date of the original Walmart pilot: September 2020

Why is Walmart still betting on drone delivery?

For Walmart, Fayetteville is another testing ground in its search for an air delivery model that can work at scale without breaking the bank. The retail giant has already tried several partnerships with different drone companies, but full integration with Flytrex, which also allows ordering through the company's dedicated app, gives it an early benchmark for operational feasibility in a typical American suburban-urban environment.

The question that remains open is largely economic: what does it actually cost to run a drone fleet that flies individual deliveries to each home, compared with a standard delivery truck making dozens of stops along a single route? The FAA may have opened a regulatory door, but the business model still needs to prove itself beyond a limited-scope pilot.

An Israeli startup at the forefront of US regulation

Flytrex, founded in Israel but focused commercially on the American market, has managed to secure one of the most significant approvals granted so far for drone deliveries over populated areas in the United States. Israeli entrepreneurs who succeed in persuading a conservative regulator like the FAA to expand flight permits over people deserve recognition in their own right, regardless of whether the broader business model has fully proven itself yet.

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Isradrone Editorial Team

The Isradrone team covers drone technology, defense, mapping, agriculture and logistics innovation from around the world. Original, research-based reporting verified for the Israeli market.

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