Your first 10 flights of drone flying
Most beginners spend their first week reading reviews and watching tutorials. That's backwards. Here's what you need to know — the legal basics, the controls, and the mistakes you'll definitely make — to go from unboxing to confident pilot in ten flights.
By The JustBeginning Editors · Published May 23, 2026
Drone flying has a reputation for being complicated. The FAA regulations, the airspace terminology, the camera settings — it sounds like homework. In practice, the first ten flights are about one thing: getting comfortable with how the drone moves, and trusting that the GPS will cover for you while you’re learning. Everything else can wait.
This is what those first ten flights actually look like, what trips up every beginner, and when it starts feeling natural.
Before flight one: the paperwork is fast
Two things are legally required before your first flight, and both take under 30 minutes combined:
FAA drone registration. Go to FAADroneZone.faa.gov, create an account, pay $5, and you’re registered for three years. The registration number goes on a label affixed to your drone — pen and masking tape works. If your drone weighs 0.55 lbs or more (most real drones do), this is not optional.
TRUST safety certificate. The FAA requires all recreational flyers to complete a free safety test. It takes about 20 minutes at trust.modelaircraft.org. You keep the certificate in your phone. There’s no failing grade, but you’ll learn a few things that matter.
Neither of these is a license. You’re not becoming a pilot. You’re just confirming you understand the basic rules — where you can fly, how high, and what to stay away from.
Download B4UFLY while you’re at it. This free FAA app shows real-time airspace restrictions for your exact location. Open it before every flight. Green means go; orange means read carefully; red means not today. Flying near an airport without LAANC authorization is not a gray area — it’s a federal violation.
Flights 1–3: learning the controls
Your first goal is simple: hover in place for thirty seconds without panicking.
That sounds trivial. On flight one, when the drone is fifteen feet in the air and a gust hits, it won’t feel trivial. GPS-stabilized drones like the DJI Mini series are remarkably forgiving, but they’re not on rails. The hover will drift. The key is not overcorrecting — small stick inputs, not big ones.
The controls you need to know:
- Left stick (Throttle / Yaw): Up and down is altitude. Left and right rotates the nose.
- Right stick (Pitch / Roll): Forward and back moves the drone forward and back. Left and right moves it sideways.
That’s it. The combinations are what produce interesting movement, but every flight for the first few sessions should be these two sticks, deliberately and slowly.
Do this on your first flight: Take off, hover for 30 seconds, move ten feet forward, pause, move ten feet back, land. Do it four times. You’ll feel the stick sensitivity drop dramatically by the fourth run.
Enable Beginner Mode. The DJI Fly app has a beginner mode that caps altitude (30m), limits speed, and keeps the drone within 30m of you. Turn it on. Leave it on for your first three or four sessions. The limits feel restrictive — they are restrictive — and that’s the entire point. Disorientation at 30m is recoverable. Disorientation at 100m is not.
Always keep the nose pointed away from you when learning. When the drone faces you, controls reverse — left is right and right is left. This is the most common beginner crash: the drone facing you, the pilot panicking, pushing the stick the wrong direction. Keep it pointing away. Always know which way the nose is facing.
Flights 4–6: making it look intentional
By flight four, hovering feels boring. Good — that’s when you start flying actual paths.
The basic moves worth practicing:
- Slow orbit: Find a subject (a tree, a car, a building) and circle it slowly, keeping the subject in the center of frame. This requires coordinating yaw and roll at the same time. It feels hard. It becomes automatic in about four sessions.
- Reveal shot: Start close to the ground near a subject, fly backward and upward simultaneously. This is the shot you see in every real estate video and every travel vlog. It looks professional and it’s not complicated once you’ve practiced it.
- The straight-back pullback: Fly forward over something interesting, pause, then pull straight back while holding altitude. Simple, clean, usable footage.
These aren’t advanced cinematography. They’re the three moves that make up most beginner drone content, and practicing them is how you develop muscle memory for coordinating both sticks at once.
On ND filters: If you’ve installed your filter set (you should have), the right choice for most daylight is ND16 or ND64. On a clear day, ND16 is your starting point. If the footage still looks harsh or overly sharp, go to ND64. If it looks blurry or dark, step down to ND8. The goal is a shutter speed roughly twice your frame rate — if you’re shooting at 30fps, aim for 1/60 shutter.
Flights 7–10: reading the environment
Around flight seven, something shifts. You stop thinking about which stick to push and start thinking about what you want to show.
This is when the environment starts to matter. Wind is the biggest variable. The Mini 4 Pro can handle up to 28 mph wind (Level 6), but flying in 15 mph gusts as a beginner is miserable — your footage will be unstable and your battery will drain faster than normal. Fly on calm days while you’re learning. The DJI Fly app shows wind speed on the home screen.
Battery management becomes real. The drone auto-returns home at 10–15% battery. If you’re 400 meters out at 20% battery, the drone will calculate whether it has enough charge to return and may start coming back on its own. Let it. The first few times this happens, you’ll panic. After that, you’ll start tracking battery from the moment you launch. Build the habit: at 50%, start thinking about where you are relative to home. At 30%, start heading back.
Get a second location. Your first three or four sessions probably happened at the same safe open field. By flight seven, you’re ready for more complex environments — a beach, a hillside, a town square. The rules don’t change, but the spatial awareness you need goes up significantly. New locations are how you build the mental library of how the drone actually handles.
The mistakes every beginner makes
These will happen. The goal isn’t to avoid them — it’s to recognize them when they do.
Flying without checking the airspace. The first time you skip B4UFLY because you’re in a hurry, you’ll fly somewhere you shouldn’t. The app takes 15 seconds. Use it.
Losing orientation. The drone rotates away from you and suddenly pushing forward flies it sideways — or toward you. The fix: pause all stick inputs, identify the nose direction from the on-screen indicator, reorient mentally, then continue. Pausing is always the right move when confused.
Panic RTH (Return to Home). If you hit RTH in a panic, the drone will fly to a preset altitude (default 30m in the DJI app) and then fly home. If there’s a tree between you and the drone, it’s going up to 30m first — which may be fine, or may be inside a tree. Set your RTH altitude higher than any obstacle near your launch point before every flight.
Recording without an ND filter. Everything looks worse without one on a sunny day. Your footage will look like security camera footage. This is fixable in five seconds before launch.
What to do after flight ten
You have the basics. Here’s what separates pilots who plateau from pilots who keep improving:
- Watch your own footage critically. What was too fast? Too jerky? What were you trying to show, and did you show it? The gap between what you intended and what you recorded closes quickly with self-critique.
- Try one new shot type each session. The hyper-lapse, the top-down orbit, the low-and-fast forward pass. Each requires different control inputs. None are hard, but all require deliberate practice.
- Learn to grade your footage in Lightroom or DaVinci Resolve. The drone captures good raw material. Basic color grading — adjusting highlights, shadows, saturation, and temperature — is what makes it look like the footage you see online. Most of the gap between “drone footage” and “cinematic drone footage” is post-processing.
The FAA rules are simple, the controls are learnable, and by flight ten you’ll have a real opinion about what you want to shoot next. That’s what flying becomes: a series of places and angles you’re curious about, plus the skills to actually reach them.
Ready to buy? See our drone flying gear guide for which DJI to start with, what accessories actually matter, and what you can skip entirely.