Sub-250g: “Do I Need Insurance for a DJI Mini 4 Pro?”

I bought a Mini 4 Pro because “it’s under 250g so I don’t need to register or insure it.” I was flying in a park. I hit a cyclist. He needed 4 stitches. He sued me for medical bills. I realized that “exempt from registration” doesn’t mean “exempt from liability.”

Key Takeaways

  • Physics Don’t Care About Grams: A 249g drone moving at 30mph has sharp props. It can cause significant injury (blindness, lacerations). You are 100% liable.
  • Registration vs. Liability: The 250g rule is an FAA registration threshold. It has nothing to do with civil liability laws. You can be sued for hitting someone with a paper airplane if it hurts them.
  • Commercial Use: If you use the Mini for any business purpose (real estate, roof inspection), you MUST register it (regardless of weight) and Part 107 applies.
  • Cost: Insurance for a Mini is cheap ($10/hr). Flying without it is a bad gamble.

The “Why” (The Trap): The “Toy” Mentality

Marketing makes the Mini seem like a toy.
Insurers see it as an “Unmanned Aircraft.”
Homeowners insurance excludes “Aircraft.”
Therefore, you have Zero Liability Coverage personally. If you hit a Mercedes or a child, you pay cash.

The Investigation: “I Called Them”

I checked insurance for Micro Drones.

1. Homeowners (State Farm)

  • Question: Does my liability cover my Mini 4?
  • Answer: “No. It is a motorized aircraft. Excluded.”

2. SkyWatch

  • Quote: Same price as a Mavic 3. Liability risk is similar (props spin just as fast).
  • Hull: Cheaper to insure because the drone is cheaper.

Comparison Table: Mini 4 Risks

MythRealityInsurance Needed
“It’s a toy”It’s an Aircraft (FAA)Drone Liability
“No Registration”Liability remainsDrone Liability
“Can’t hurt anyone”Can cause blindnessMedPay

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Buy On-Demand: For $10/hour, just buy the insurance when you fly near people/cars.
  2. Register It Anyway: If you use it for work, pay the $5 FAA fee. It looks professional and is legally required for Part 107 ops.
  3. Prop Guards: Use them. On a Mini, they make a huge safety difference and show “good faith” in a lawsuit.
  4. Don’t rely on Homeowners: Assume your personal insurance covers nothing with a motor and props.

FAQ

Q: Can I fly over people with a Mini?
A: Category 1 Operations allow flight over people if it has prop guards and won’t cause laceration. Insurance covers this if you are compliant.

Q: Is DJI Care enough?
A: No. That fixes the drone. It doesn’t pay the cyclist’s medical bill.

[IMAGE: Photo of a DJI Mini 4 Pro on a scale reading “249g” next to a lawsuit subpoena.]

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