Structured Pathways Into Professional Drone Work

Learn the knowledge and operational foundations required to enter the drone industry legally, confidently, and with a real plan.

Start with Part 107 Pathway

New to commercial drones? Start here.

Most people don’t struggle with drones because they can’t fly.

They struggle because they never get a clear, structured path into the industry.

CloudCity Academy exists to replace guesswork with clarity.

Explore Part 107 Pathway

Become a certified remote pilot through a structured, step-by-step path built for real understanding — not memorization.

Updated and aligned with the latest FAA Part 107 standards.

Confidence starts with clarity

Structured learning path from basics to certification
Beginner-friendly guidance every step of the way
Build real-world confidence through hands-on training
Exam-ready preparation for Part 107 certification

What You'll Learn

Master the skills you need to become a certified drone pilot

Regulation Basics

Get clear on the rules — what’s required, what’s allowed, and what will get you in trouble. This is the foundation that separates certified pilots from hobbyists.

Airspace & Charts

Airspace can look confusing at first, but once you know how to read it, everything clicks. We’ll break down sectional charts, LAANC, controlled vs. uncontrolled areas — all in a way that actually makes sense.

Weather & Risk

Weather plays a bigger role in drone operations than most pilots realize. You’ll learn how to read METARs, spot red flags, and make smart go/no-go calls with confidence.

Operational Know-How

From crew roles to emergency procedures, this is where you learn how to think and plan like a commercial pilot — not just someone flying for fun.

Exam Strategy & Review

We’ll go through practice questions, common trick areas, and patterns the FAA loves to repeat — so the exam feels familiar, not overwhelming.

Real-World Application

It’s one thing to memorize the rules — it’s another to understand how they show up in real jobs. We connect the dots between the regulations and actual use cases in the drone industry.