Density altitude is the altitude the air "feels like" to your drone. High temperature, high elevation, and high humidity all raise density altitude, which means less lift, longer takeoff rolls, and lower performance ceilings. Here is what the Part 107 test asks and how to think about it.
Density altitude is the altitude the air "feels like" to an aircraft. Hot, humid, high-elevation air behaves like much thinner air at a higher altitude, which reduces lift and power.
For drones, high density altitude means shorter battery life, slower climbs, and less margin in wind. For the Part 107 test, you need to understand the concept and recognize the three factors that increase it.
Memory shortcut: "Hot, High, Humid." All three Hs raise density altitude. All three reduce drone performance.
Less dense air means propellers move less air per rotation. That has four practical consequences during a flight:
This matters in practice. A drone that hovers cleanly at sea level on a cool morning may struggle to climb out of ground effect on a hot afternoon in Denver. Battery indicators may read full but the available power is less than usual.
Pressure altitude is what your altimeter reads when set to 29.92 inches of mercury (the standard atmospheric pressure). It accounts for atmospheric pressure variation but ignores temperature and humidity.
Density altitude is pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature. On a standard day (15°C at sea level, dropping with altitude), pressure altitude and density altitude are equal. On a hot day, density altitude is higher than pressure altitude.
For the Part 107 test, remember the relationship: higher temperature than standard = density altitude exceeds pressure altitude. Standard temperature = they are equal. Lower temperature = density altitude is less than pressure altitude.
| Scenario | Density altitude | Drone performance |
|---|---|---|
| Cool morning at sea level | Low (close to actual altitude) | Best performance |
| Hot afternoon at sea level | Higher than actual altitude | Reduced lift and battery life |
| Hot day at 5,000 ft elevation | Significantly higher (maybe 7,000+ ft) | Noticeable performance drop |
| Hot, humid day at high elevation | Highest (could be 10,000+ ft) | Severe performance drop |
Most flight-planning apps calculate density altitude automatically when you enter your location and current temperature. Apps that include this: ForeFlight, Aloft, AirMap, AutoPylot.
For a quick mental check, use this rule of thumb: every 10°C above standard temperature raises density altitude by roughly 1,200 feet at your location.
The FAA also publishes a density altitude chart in FAA-H-8083-25C (Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge) that lets you look up density altitude from pressure altitude and temperature. The chart is occasionally referenced on the Part 107 test.
Content here is derived from the FAA Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (FAA-H-8083-25C) and the FAA Remote Pilot Study Guide (FAA-G-8082-22). It is for educational purposes. Verify performance limits for your specific drone in the manufacturer's documentation.
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