U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) UAS Group Classification

U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) UAS Group Classification ksc17

The United States Department of Defense (DoD) organizes Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UASs) into five distinct groups, as illustrated in Table 3 and Figure 9. This classification is determined by several key criteria: the system’s maximum gross takeoff weight (MGTW), its typical operating altitude, and its air speed. Importantly, if a UAS possesses any attribute that falls within a higher group—such as exceeding the MGTW, flying at a higher altitude, or reaching a greater airspeed—it is assigned to that higher classification group, regardless of its other characteristics. This tiered approach ensures each UAS is categorized according to its most advanced operational capability.

Table 1 The U.S. Department of Defense classification of UAS
GroupSize

MGTW (lb)

Normal Operating Altitude

Airspeed (knots)

1

Small

0–20

<1,200 ft AGL

<100

2

Medium

21–55

<3,500 ft

<250

3

Large

<1,320

<18,000 ft MSL

<250

4

Larger

>1,320

<18,000 ft MSL

Any

5

Largest

>1,320

>18,000 ft

Any

*AGL = Above Ground Level; MSL = Mean Sea Level. Source: U.S. Army Roadmap for UAS 2010–2035 (as cited in the course notes).

 

Horizontal bar graph of Dod UAS groups and their weight and indicative altitude ceilings
Figure 9 Schematic visualization of DoD UAS groups. Caps shown for plotting only; Groups 4–5 may exceed the schematic weight cap.
Credit: CREDIT_HERE