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Drone Rules for Singleton Military Area, Australian Army
Singleton Military Area, New South Wales (nsw)
• Australia
358 Range Rd, Whittingham NSW 2331, Australia
Lat: -32.6281 • Lng: 151.174
Rules Edit History: Singleton Military Area, Australian Army
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May 28, 2026 1:34 AM
Approved
• This edit clearly identifies the Singleton Military Area as a heavily restricted drone environment due to its status as an active Australian Army training and garrison facility conducting live fire exercises, rotary wing aviation operations, and other sensitive Defence activities. It gives pilots and reviewers precise guidance on CASA restricted area designations, NOTAM checking requirements, the serious legal consequences of unauthorised drone surveillance near military installations, and the f
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Approved
Confidence: 0.99
Your proposed edit has been approved. It effectively communicates the stringent restrictions on drone operations near the Singleton Military Area, emphasizing the need for prior coordination and approval from Defence authorities and the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA).
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- millitary area
| Field | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| Flight status | Unknown | NoFly |
| Summary | — | rone flying in or near the Singleton Military Area is heavily restricted because the site operates as an active Australian Army training and garrison facility with sensitive military operations and designated restricted airspace. Permission for drone operations is controlled by the Australian Defence Force, Department |
| Mapped shapes | — | 41f12414-02b3-4997-9d7c-ec92c4c39325 |
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The Singleton Military Area is one of the Australian Army's most important training and garrison establishments in New South Wales, centred on Lone Pine Barracks in the Hunter Valley. The facility is home to key Army combat, combat support, and training units, and conducts a wide range of military activities including live fire exercises, armoured vehicle training, rotary wing aviation operations, and other sensitive Defence activities across an extensive land and airspace footprint. The combination of active aviation operations and live training exercises makes the surrounding airspace particularly hazardous and sensitive to unauthorised drone activity. CASA designates airspace over and around active military areas as Restricted Areas on official aviation charts, with activation periods tied to Defence training schedules. Pilots must check current NOTAMs and review ERSA and airspace charts before considering any operation in the vicinity of the Singleton Military Area. Even when restricted areas are not formally activated, the presence of an active military garrison means drone pilots must avoid any activity that could be perceived as surveillance, interference, or a security threat to Defence personnel, equipment, or infrastructure. Australian law imposes serious penalties for unauthorised surveillance of or intrusion into military areas, and these provisions apply directly to drone operations. FPV operations and any flights that could compromise the safety or security of military training activities are strictly prohibited. Any commercial, research, or media operator seeking to conduct drone operations near the facility must engage directly and formally with Defence authorities well in advance to obtain all necessary approvals, security clearances, and operational permissions before any flight activity takes place.
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+ The Singleton Military Area is one of the Australian Army's most important training and garrison establishments in New South Wales, centred on Lone Pine Barracks in the Hunter Valley. The facility is home to key Army combat, combat support, and training units, and conducts a wide range of military activities including live fire exercises, armoured vehicle training, rotary wing aviation operations, and other sensitive Defence activities across an extensive land and airspace footprint. The combination of active aviation operations and live training exercises makes the surrounding airspace particularly hazardous and sensitive to unauthorised drone activity. + CASA designates airspace over and around active military areas as Restricted Areas on official aviation charts, with activation periods tied to Defence training schedules. Pilots must check current NOTAMs and review ERSA and airspace charts before considering any operation in the vicinity of the Singleton Military Area. Even when restricted areas are not formally activated, the presence of an active military garrison means drone pilots must avoid any activity that could be perceived as surveillance, interference, or a security threat to Defence personnel, equipment, or infrastructure. + Australian law imposes serious penalties for unauthorised surveillance of or intrusion into military areas, and these provisions apply directly to drone operations. FPV operations and any flights that could compromise the safety or security of military training activities are strictly prohibited. Any commercial, research, or media operator seeking to conduct drone operations near the facility must engage directly and formally with Defence authorities well in advance to obtain all necessary approvals, security clearances, and operational permissions before any flight activity takes place.