The Short Answer
For most consumer drones: no. Even light rain carries real risk. Most consumer drones, including the DJI Mavic and Mini series, have no water resistance rating. A few prosumer models are rated for light rain. Know your drone's rating before you fly — don't assume.
Most articles on this topic hedge so much they become useless. The honest answer is that "it depends on your specific drone" is actually correct, but most people asking this question own a Mavic 3, a Mini 4 Pro, or similar — and those are not rated for rain, period.
What Rain Actually Does to a Drone
The risk isn't just "it'll get wet." The failure modes are specific and some are delayed, which is why pilots underestimate them.
The delayed failure mode is what catches pilots. A drone that lands safely after flying through drizzle may fail on the next flight, once moisture has moved through the electronics. Warranty claims for water damage are almost universally denied, and most manufacturers require proof of IP rating to cover weather-related incidents.
Drizzle, Light Rain, Moderate Rain: What's the Difference?
Weather forecasts use specific precipitation rate thresholds. Here's what each category actually means for your drone:
Drizzle is the grey area. At under 0.5mm/hr the droplet size is small and intermittent, and some pilots fly in it without incident. The problem is that forecast models don't distinguish well between "a few drops" and sustained drizzle, and conditions can tip quickly. For non-weatherproofed drones, drizzle is a judgment call with real consequences. Light rain and above is not.
One number that matters more than precipitation rate: precipitation probability. A 70% chance of 0.2mm is a worse situation than a 10% chance of 2mm, because the first means rain is almost certain to occur. Check both probability and expected accumulation before flying.
IP Ratings: Which Drones Handle Moisture
IP (Ingress Protection) ratings define how well a device resists water. For drones, anything below IPX4 offers no meaningful rain protection. Here's a breakdown of common consumer and prosumer models:
| Drone | IP Rating | Rain verdict |
|---|---|---|
| DJI Mini 4 Pro | None | No rain. Not water resistant. |
| DJI Mavic 3 / 3 Pro | None | No rain. Not water resistant. |
| DJI Air 3 | None | No rain. Not water resistant. |
| DJI Avata 2 | None | No rain. Not water resistant. |
| Autel EVO Lite+ | None | No rain. Not water resistant. |
| DJI Matrice 30T | IP55 | Light to moderate rain. Built for professional field use. |
| Skydio 2+ | IPX4 | Splash resistant. Light drizzle only. |
| Parrot Anafi USA | IP53 | Light drizzle. Limited water resistance. |
If your drone isn't on this list, check the manufacturer's spec sheet for an IP rating. If there isn't one listed, assume no water resistance. "Built to military standards" and similar marketing phrases are not the same as an IP rating.
How to Read Rain in a Weather Forecast
Standard weather apps show rain in a way that's optimized for "should I bring an umbrella," not "is it safe to fly a $1,500 drone." The numbers that matter for flight planning:
This is a percentage chance that any measurable precipitation falls during the forecast window. Above 30%, treat it as likely for flight planning purposes. Above 50%, plan around it. This is the first number to check.
Shown in mm per hour or mm total for the period. Under 0.1mm might be trace moisture. Over 0.5mm is real drizzle. Over 2mm is light rain. Use this alongside probability: 20% chance of 3mm is a genuine risk worth postponing for.
Many forecasts use WMO weather codes: codes 51-55 indicate drizzle, 61-65 indicate rain, 80-82 indicate showers. Showers (80+) are particularly tricky because they're short, intense, and harder to time around than steady rain.
The forecast you're reading was generated hours ago. For rain, pay attention to the trend: is probability rising or falling in the hourly breakdown? A window where probability drops from 40% to 10% to 5% over three hours is much safer than the reverse. Always check hourly, not just the daily summary.
Dronecast pulls precipitation probability, expected accumulation, wind speed, gusts, and visibility for your specific location and hour. One score, one decision.
Check conditions with Dronecast →How Dronecast Flags Rain Risk
Dronecast combines precipitation probability and expected accumulation into its flight score alongside wind, gusts, and visibility. Rain isn't treated as a binary yes/no: a 15% chance of 0.1mm scores differently from a 60% chance of 2mm, because they're different risk levels.
The score penalizes two things independently: the probability that precipitation occurs at all, and the intensity if it does. High probability of trace moisture gets a moderate penalty. Any meaningful accumulation above 0.5mm/hr gets a hard penalty regardless of probability, because light rain is light rain.
Precipitation probability (%), expected accumulation (mm), and weather code. The combination of all three determines how the rain component affects your flight score. A high-probability, low-accumulation forecast scores differently from a low-probability, high-intensity one.
Forecast models have limits. A score of 65 on a day with 20% rain probability still means there's a 1-in-5 chance you're flying in rain. Dronecast surfaces the numbers so you can make an informed call, but the decision and the hardware are yours.
Precipitation · Wind · Gusts · Visibility · One score.
Open Dronecast →