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Amazon has finally been awarded permission by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to begin parcel delivery flights by drone in the UK.
While the e-commerce giant has been given the green light to commence operations immediately, it remains unclear as to when parcel delivery flights within the UK might actually take off.
The news comes just days after Amazon said it was abandoning its attempts to begin drone-based delivery flights in Italy, citing airspace restrictions and other regulatory delays.
Amazon gets permission to start drone parcel delivery flights in the UK
According to Amazon, the company received the necessary certification and permissions it required from the UK’s CAA to begin drone-based delivery flights on Friday, 9 January.
The move paves the way for the global logistics giant to begin air drops of parcels as soon as Amazon is equipped and ready to do so.
The first deliveries are planned to commence in the area surrounding the town of Darlington in County Durham, Northeast England, although Amazon has not yet advised when the first ‘live’ delivery flights will take place.
Photo: Amazon
It is expected that the company will operate up to 10 flights per hour from a local warehouse in County Durham. Flights will take place 12 hours a day, seven days a week.
According to a company statement, the use of drones will allow for direct delivery from the time of order to homes in under two hours. Such flights will see unmanned aerial vehicles dropping parcels from a low height into the gardens of Amazon customers.
“This is an exciting step towards bringing drone delivery to customers in Darlington. We are continuing to work closely with Darlington council and the Civil Aviation Authority on this innovative first for the UK,” Amazon said.
The company had originally hoped its plans, submitted in March 2025, would be approved before Christmas. However, the regulator only confirmed its permission to Amazon earlier in January.
Amazon has overcome major hurdles to get this far
Although some local residents have opposed the plans, primarily based on the fear of potential aircraft noise, Amazon has offered assurances that the drones are designed to minimise disruption, with a minimal noise footprint and zero emissions.
The use of drones is expected to cause less noise disturbance than that created by delivery drivers’ slamming doors and reversing, said the company. Adding that it was “looking forward to the new venture.”
Amazon’s Darlington operation will mark the company’s first drone delivery service in Britain. Currently, autonomous drone flights in the UK require operators to reserve airspace for their aircraft from the CAA.
Photo: Amazon
This is because a more general framework surrounding the use of drones and specifically how they detect and avoid other aircraft is still to be finalised by the regulator.
Amazon initially tested drones in the countryside surrounding Cambridge around a decade ago. However, these plans were terminated after the company became frustrated with the lack of progress being made by the CAA to regulate drone deliveries in the UK, among other concerns.
Amazon continues parcel deliveries by drone in the US
Since those initial trials in the UK, Amazon has been successfully carrying out drone delivery tests in various American cities over the past few years. Amazon’s Prime Air drone delivery service is currently active in select US locations like the Phoenix metro area (Tolleson, AZ) and San Antonio, Texas.
But Prime Air’s path has not been smooth in the US to date. In October 2025, two Amazon drones crashed in Tolleson, Arizona, after colliding with a construction crane, forcing the company to pause trials for the second time in 2025. The NTSB is currently investigating that incident.
The service delivers eligible packages under 2.3kg (5 lbs) like toiletries, essentials, medications, and electronics within an hour, integrating into Same-Day Delivery stations for faster, streamlined service during daylight hours and fair weather.
The company is expanding beyond initial test sites in Lockeford, California and College Station, Texas, in 2025, utilising its newly introduced MK30 drones designed for longer flights, quieter operation, and better weather resistance.
The flights are operated in conjunction with the USS Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) as the agency develops its Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) regulatory framework and associated certification guidelines for the control and regulation of UAVs.
The MK30 drones fly precise paths, release packages in backyards, and operate during daylight and good weather, although they can also fly in rainy conditions and varied temperatures.
The drones can autonomously detect and avoid obstacles like people, pets, and other aircraft for safe flights. They deploy from existing Amazon Same-Day sites, merging with traditional ground deliveries via road vehicles to expedite certain eligible deliveries.
While UK drone deliveries will begin, test flights in Italy are shelved
The move to approve UK drone delivery flights comes just days after Amazon pulled the plug on its efforts to launch same-day parcel delivery flights in Italy. Earlier in January, Amazon told Reuters it had “decided to stop our commercial drone delivery plans in Italy” despite completing successful tests in San Salvo in 2024.
Amazon had announced the successful completion of initial drone delivery tests in the town in the central Abruzzo region of Italy in December 2024 – an investment which now appears to have been written off.
The Italian civil aviation authority ENAC called the decision “unexpected” and linked it to “recent financial events involving the Group.”
Photo: Amazon
However, Amazon laid the blame for the trial’s failure squarely at the feet of the Italian authorities, although it came up short of blaming the aviation regulator specifically.
A delicately worded Amazon statement addressing the matter said that “Despite positive engagement and progress with Italian aerospace regulators, the broader business regulatory framework in the country does not, at this time, support our longer-term objectives for this program.”
As reported by DroneXL, Italy’s complex labour laws, tax structures, and business regulations have long frustrated American tech companies. The fact that ENAC mentioned “recent financial events involving the Group” suggests there may be more to this story than Amazon is publicly disclosing.
UK move could see drone deliveries in more nations soon
With the UK CAA’s decision to allow the commencement of drone-based delivery flights, and despite the seemingly insurmountable obstacles experienced in Italy, this is being seen by the logistics industry that the mindset of regulators is becoming more open to the concept of drone deliveries.
Photo: Amazon
Analysts believe that, with the broadening of attitudes as seen in the US and the UK, the next stage in drone delivery flights is here, with trials in other countries likely to begin later in 2026.
So far, Amazon has partnered with countries keen to negotiate clear regulatory pathways and that offer supportive business environments to encourage drone-based delivery flights. There will undoubtedly be more countries that will be keen to join this so far small and exclusive club in the near future.
Featured image: Amazon
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