Know the airspace before you drive to the site
Check restricted zones and weather together, get a clear go or no-go, and keep your authorization on file. Coverage for the United States and 11 European countries.
Airspace and Weather, in One Place
If you plan flights across a separate airspace site, weather site, and map, this brings them into one view. Plan the flight where the work already lives.
United States Airspace
Full US airspace with FAA data: controlled airspace classes, no-fly zones, special-use areas, and pre-approved LAANC flying heights.
The right region loads based on where you are planning, so you see what applies to the site in front of you.
European Coverage
Restricted zones across 11 European countries, with zone types and boundaries shown before you fly.
Includes Sweden, Finland, Ireland, Spain, Switzerland, Denmark, Austria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Cyprus.
Project Airspace Read
Each project shows a plain CLEAR, CHECK, CAUTION, or NO-GO read on its site.
Keep the LAANC authorization number on file alongside the project it belongs to.
Pre-Flight Planner
Weather, airspace, and the best flight window in one view before anyone heads out.
Find the safest window automatically, with weather and airspace in one view.
Weather Built In
Current conditions, hourly and weekly forecasts, and a go or no-go safety score at any location.
Wind, visibility, rain, and storms scored for flying, so the call is clear.
Find The Site
All your project locations on one map, with one-click directions and three-word addresses.
Get a crew to the exact spot, even when there is no street address.
Why Airspace Planning Matters
A drive to a no-fly site can cost a day. Checking the airspace and weather before you commit can help keep crews on flyable work.
Plan Before You Drive
Know whether a site is flyable before anyone leaves the office, instead of finding out on arrival.
Fewer Surprises In The Field
Restricted zones and weather sit on the same map as your work, not on a separate website.
Coverage Where You Work
Airspace for the United States and 11 European countries, with more added over time.
Works alongside weather planning and the work in surveying and construction.
Know the airspace before you drive to the site
Check zones, weather, and authorizations in one place, then send the crew with confidence.