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The Specific Operations Risk Assessment (SORA) is the cornerstone of the European framework for operations in the specific category that go beyond standard scenarios (STS). It is the methodology defined by EASA to identify risks, apply mitigations, and prove to the competent authority that a complex operation can be performed safely.
From BVLOS with Dock systems to infrastructure inspections or multi-UAS swarm operations, SORA is the gateway to advanced drone missions in Europe.
👉 At EU Drone Port, we don’t just explain SORA — we prepare it for you. Our team produces the complete risk assessment, documentation, and supporting materials required for the authority to grant approval.
We handle the entire SORA process on behalf of our clients:
Our service ensures that what you submit is complete, compliant, and optimised for approval.
In addition to doing the Operational Authorisation (SORA) documentation, we provide advanced training modules for operations in a specific category and customised to your SORA’s concept of operations. This ensures your team understands how to apply the mitigations defined in the assessment, and builds credibility with the authority.
SORA is not just paperwork, it is the professional path to safe and authorised complex operations in Europe.
👉 At EU Drone Port, we do the SORA for you – from the risk assessment to the final authorisation – while equipping your team with the knowledge to operate confidently in complex environments.
With us, compliance becomes a service, not a burden.
A SORA (Specific Operations Risk Assessment) is the EASA methodology used to justify and approve complex drone operations in the specific category. It’s required when a mission goes beyond STS scenarios, for example BVLOS flights, operations near people, or higher-risk environments that need authority approval.
Most rejections happen because the SORA is incomplete, poorly structured, missing supporting evidence, or not aligned with EASA methodology. In complex operations, small gaps often create delays. That’s why we don’t just “help” — we prepare the SORA properly and deliver it ready for approval.
Most rejections happen because the SORA is incomplete, poorly structured, missing supporting evidence, or not aligned with EASA methodology. In complex operations, small gaps often create delays. That’s why we don’t just “help” — we prepare the SORA properly and deliver it ready for approval.
A SORA is usually supported by an operational documentation pack. Authorities commonly expect documents such as:
Concept of Operations (ConOps)
Operations Manual
Emergency and contingency procedures
Roles and responsibilities
Training and competency evidence
Technical information relevant to the operation and mitigations
Yes. SORA is commonly used to support approvals for urban operations, industrial inspections, and missions near critical infrastructure. It provides a structured way to demonstrate that risks are controlled and the operation can be performed safely in complex environments.
Yes. EU Drone Port handles the full SORA workflow end-to-end: we draft the risk assessment, develop the supporting documentation, support submission to the competent authority and defend agains the CAA inspectors—so you can focus on operations, not paperwork.