C‑DRONE
Tiled rooftops seen from above during a drone inspection

🏚️ ROOF INSPECTION · ARLES (13) · €200–650 PER JOB

Drone roof inspection in Arles

Drone roof inspection replaces scaffolding or a cherry picker at a tenth of the cost and with zero human risk. In under an hour of flight, we photograph an entire roof in high resolution: displaced or cracked tiles, missing slates, damaged ridge lines, punctured zinc work, moss, blocked gutters, faulty flashing around chimneys. Optical zoom detects defects invisible from the ground, down to cracks of a few millimetres.

You receive a photographic report organised by zone (slopes, valleys, verges, singular points) with the location of each defect and full-resolution images. This document supports your roofer's quotation, an insurance claim after storm or hail, or a pre-purchase survey. Co-owned buildings, social landlords, churches and listed buildings: we work at any height.

Free quote — roof inspection in Arles

Rates

€200–650 per job — the range observed on the 2026 French market, including regulatory preparation, flight and delivery. The exact quote depends on the site, the deliverable and the airspace context in Arles.

Common use cases

The local context in Arles

Arles piles up superlatives: mainland France's largest commune (758 km²), a UNESCO-listed Roman and Romanesque ensemble (arena, ancient theatre, Saint-Trophime cloister), Van Gogh's legacy, the Rencontres photography festival and the Frank Gehry-designed Luma tower. To the south stretches the Camargue: a regional natural park and national nature reserve where low-altitude flight is strictly controlled to protect flamingos and birdlife — drones are effectively banned there without authorisation. To the east, the military zones of Istres-Le Tubé air base set their own limits.

The Arles economy lives on culture and tourism, agriculture (Camargue rice, Crau hay) and a river port on the Rhône. Drone demand: heritage documentation (with monument authorisations), rice farming, monitoring of the Rhône dykes — a major issue since the 2003 floods — and audiovisual productions.

Applicable regulations

Roof inspection is flown at low height directly above the building, most often in sub-category A1 with a sub-250 g drone or in A2 with a class C2 drone when sensor resolution demands it. In built-up areas, commercial flights are conducted either in the open category over public space (allowed for professionals since 1 January 2026, no overflight of people, daytime only) or under the STS-01 scenario with a prefectural declaration. The pilot keeps clear of uninvolved persons: the ground area under the drone is secured during the flight. Operator registration on AlphaTango is mandatory, height is in any case far below the 120 m ceiling, and nearby restricted zones (hospital helipads, airfields) are checked on the Géoportail map.

Frequently asked questions

Is the inspection report valid for my insurance?

Yes: the dated, geolocated photographic report is accepted by insurers as evidence after a loss. For adversarial expert value, it can be supplemented by a building surveyor's visit.

Can you inspect a very steep roof or a bell tower?

That is exactly the drone's strength: steep slopes, bell towers, spires and towers are inspected without ropes or scaffolding, with images taken a few metres from the surface thanks to obstacle-avoidance sensors.

How long does a roof inspection take?

For a detached house, 30 to 45 minutes on site is enough. An industrial roof or a co-owned building takes 1 to 3 hours. The report is delivered within 48 hours.

Can this service be flown anywhere in Arles?

Almost: Réserve naturelle nationale de Camargue (survol réglementé, drones proscrits sans autorisation); Zones militaires de la base aérienne d'Istres-Le Tubé à l'est; Centre ancien UNESCO très fréquenté. Depending on the exact location, the pilot picks the right framework (open or specific category) and files the required declarations — included in the quote.

Other drone services in Arles

Roof inspection near Arles

Roof inspection: every city →

Going further