For security professionals, drones are a double-edges sword: tools that can save lives, yet also vehicles for smuggling, espionage and disruption.
In the right hands, drones are game changers:
But the same technology is increasingly used against us.
One of the clearest examples comes from the UK prisons. Between April 2024 and March 2025, drone enabled smuggling surged 43%, from 1,196 incidents to 1,712. The cargo? Drugs, weapons, mobile phones and contraband too dangerous to reach inmates any other way.
This isn't an isolated sector problem. The same tactics can easily be deployed over private properties, event venues or corporate sites.
Persistent drone flights over private property risk breaching UK GDPR and may constitute harassment or trespassing. These risks can also extend to data theft, surveillance, and physical infiltration.
The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) advices those affected to document incidents, report them to police or the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), and avoid direct confrontation with drone operators. Many organisations now employ drone detection systems to spot threats before they cause harm.
In the UK, all drone pilots (hobbyists or professional) must:
Operators can use tools like the Drone Assist app to identify no fly zones, while commercial operators must be certified by the Civil Aviation Authority.
From January 2026, the UK will introduce new drone classifications (UK0-UK6) and updated regulations:
By 2028, even older or home built drones must comply.
Legal interpretations are shifting. Low altitude airspace above private property may soon be more explicitly recognised as part of that property, potentially giving owners stronger legal recourse against intrusive flights.
For the security industry, this means:
Drones are rewriting the security playbook. They're fast, accessible, and can evade traditional ground-based surveillance. This makes drone awareness, detection technology a must have for any comprehensive security strategy.
The organisations that proactively integrate counter drone measures today will be the ones least surprised by what's hovering over their perimeter tomorrow.