Wind is the single most common cause of UK drone losses. Not GPS jamming, not pilot error in flight — wind. Specifically, gust differentials that exceed the drone's compensation ability when it's already at speed limit climbing into wind. Here's what the actual numbers look like in 2026.
Manufacturer ratings vs. reality
- DJI Mini 4 Pro — rated 10.7 m/s (~21 kt), realistic operating limit ~15 kt sustained
- DJI Mini 4K — rated 8.5 m/s (~16 kt), realistic ~12 kt sustained
- DJI Mavic 3 Pro — rated 12 m/s (~23 kt), realistic ~20 kt sustained, gusts to 25
- DJI Mavic 4 Pro — rated 13 m/s (~25 kt), realistic ~22 kt sustained
- DJI Air 3 — rated 12 m/s (~23 kt), realistic ~18 kt sustained
- Autel EVO Lite+ — rated 12 m/s (~23 kt), realistic ~17 kt sustained
- Typical 5" cinematic FPV — not officially rated, ~25 kt with weight, less aggressive in 30+
The number the spec sheet doesn't tell you
Manufacturer ratings assume steady wind. The number that actually downs drones is the gust factor — the difference between sustained wind and peak gust. A steady 15 kt with gusts to 35 kt will wreck a Mini 4 Pro despite both numbers being within rated range, because the drone's compensation algorithms can't keep up with the differential.
UK Met Office METAR / TAF reports include gust data when ≥10 kt above sustained. Open-Meteo (which UK Drone Map uses) reports both. If gusts exceed sustained by more than 10 kt, ground a sub-1 kg drone regardless of the headline figure.
The Beaufort scale, drone-translated
- Beaufort 0–2 (0–7 kt) — smoke vertical, leaves rustle. All classes safe.
- Beaufort 3 (8–12 kt) — leaves and small twigs in motion. Sub-250 g caution; otherwise fine.
- Beaufort 4 (13–18 kt) — small branches move, dust raised. Sub-250 g grounded; class 1 caution.
- Beaufort 5 (19–24 kt) — small trees sway. Class 1 grounded; class 2 caution.
- Beaufort 6 (25–31 kt) — large branches in motion, whistling. All sub-2 kg grounded.
- Beaufort 7+ (32+ kt) — whole trees in motion. Don't fly.
Altitude effect
Wind speed at 400 ft AGL is typically 1.4× to 2× the surface wind in open terrain — sometimes more in built-up areas where buildings cause venturi acceleration. A reported 10 kt at ground level may be 18 kt at the ceiling. Always check forecast wind at the altitude you'll fly, not just the surface number.
Warning signs in the air
- Yawing without input — drone rotating about its vertical axis when stick is centred. Motors are at compensation limit on one side.
- Headwind home flight slower than 50% of cruise — battery isn't going to make it. Land into wind, walk to the drone.
- Repeated GPS reposition micro-adjustments in hover — drone is sliding faster than GPS update rate.
- Gust of "lift" without throttle input — vertical gust just hit you. The next one might be downward.
- Battery voltage sag under sustained climb — at the point you should land, you have less endurance than usual.
When the DJI app says it's fine and it isn't
The "wind speed" indicator in the DJI Fly app is derived from motor compensation effort, not airspeed. It updates only after a few seconds of consistent compensation, so gust events don't appear until they're sustained. If you want real-time gust awareness, an external anemometer at the launch site (Kestrel 1000, ~£90) tells you what the drone is actually flying into.
The single best safety habit: launch into wind, land into wind, and abort the flight if the headwind home leg burns more than the outbound tailwind earned.