DroneReady Curriculum

← All posts

Explainer · · 8 min read

FAA Part 107 vs. TRUST:
what high schoolers actually need

This is the first question almost every CTE coordinator asks when a drone program comes up: "Don't the kids just need that free online drone test?" The answer is no — and the confusion between TRUST and the FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate is the single most common planning mistake in high-school drone education. Getting this distinction right shapes your whole program: the credential you target, the curriculum you buy, and whether the program qualifies for Perkins V funding.

1. The two-minute version

If your program's goal is workforce readiness, a credential on a transcript, or Perkins V eligibility, the target is Part 107. TRUST is, at best, a 30-minute footnote.

2. What TRUST actually is

TRUST exists because of 49 USC §44809 — the statutory "exception for limited recreational operations of unmanned aircraft." Anyone flying a drone strictly for fun under that exception must pass TRUST and carry proof.

Key properties:

TRUST is a safety-awareness check for hobbyists. It is genuinely useful as a day-one classroom warm-up — every student can complete it in one period and it gets them thinking about airspace and safety. But it is not the destination.

3. What FAA Part 107 actually is

14 CFR Part 107 is the rule that governs commercial and other non-recreational small-UAS operations. To act as a remote pilot in command under Part 107, a person must hold a Remote Pilot Certificate. Earning it requires:

The knowledge test is the part a curriculum addresses. It is built on the FAA Airman Certification Standards (FAA-S-ACS-10B) and is genuinely difficult for an unprepared 16-year-old — airspace, sectional charts, weather (METAR/TAF), loading and performance, regulations, ADM. This is why a real curriculum matters: TRUST you cannot fail; Part 107 you very much can.

4. Side-by-side

  TRUST FAA Part 107
AuthorizesRecreational flying onlyCommercial / non-recreational operations
Is it a credential?No — completion onlyYes — FAA airman certificate
Minimum ageNone16
Can you fail?NoYes (70% to pass)
CostFreeExam fee at testing center
WhereOnline, self-pacedProctored testing center
Perkins V eligible target?NoYes
Curriculum needed?~30 minA full course

5. The age-16 gotcha that breaks course placement

Here is the planning trap. Part 107 has a hard minimum age of 16 to hold the certificate. A 14- or 15-year-old freshman can learn 100% of the material and can even sit the knowledge test (the FAA does not age-gate the test itself), but cannot be issued the certificate until they turn 16.

Practical implications for program design:

6. So where does TRUST fit in a CTE program?

TRUST is not the goal, but it is not useless either. The smart use:

7. The bottom line for program design

Target FAA Part 107. It is the credential employers recognize, the one that satisfies Perkins V's industry-recognized-credential requirement, and the one worth a transcript line. Use TRUST as a 30-minute on-ramp in week one — then spend the rest of the course preparing students for the test they can actually fail, and actually win.

The DroneReady Curriculum is built end-to-end for the Part 107 knowledge test: 378 FAA-style questions across all 14 ACS areas, an interactive sectional-chart simulator, lesson decks, and a 6-week pacing guide that lands the exam push when your students are old enough to be issued the certificate.

What's next

New to standards alignment? Start with the full crosswalk page or read the Perkins V funding guide to see how the Part 107 target unlocks federal CTE money. Questions? [email protected].

Free · No signup

Try the chart simulator

See exactly how hard the Part 107 chart questions are — 5 interactive questions.

Open the simulator →

Flagship

6-Week Bootcamp Curriculum

The full Part 107 prep course — all 14 topics, decks, bell ringers, pacing.

See what's inside →