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In order for an operation to fall within this accelerated approval pathway, several criteria must be met.
First, only operations conducted within the visual line of sight of the remote pilot (VLOS) may be considered.
The fast-track approval process is an accelerated pathway offered by certain European civil aviation authorities — including Spain and Germany — that allows operators to obtain authorisation for low-risk VLOS operations more quickly, provided that all regulatory requirements are met and documentation is complete and properly structured.
Only VLOS operations whose risk assessment under the SORA 2.5 methodology results in SAIL I or SAIL II may qualify for the fast-track approval pathway, as these levels correspond to low-risk operations within the specific category.
SAIL (Specific Assurance and Integrity Level) is the risk classification resulting from the SORA methodology. SAIL I and SAIL II indicate low-risk operations and are determined by evaluating both the Ground Risk Class (GRC) and the Air Risk Class (ARC) of the intended operation.
Operators must submit a complete and properly structured set of documentation, including the risk assessment following SORA 2.5, the defined mitigation measures and their level of robustness, and — where applicable — a declaration of compliance based on the Means of Compliance (MoC) published by EASA.
The processing time varies depending on the civil aviation authority and the completeness of the documentation submitted. However, when all requirements are fully met, the fast-track procedure can significantly reduce the standard administrative evaluation time.