Curious who owns that aircraft you spotted overhead, or trying to verify a pilot's credentials before booking a charter? The Federal Aviation Administration runs several public databases that let anyone search aircraft registrations, airmen certificates, and drone registrations. You can pull this data for free in seconds, and it's used every day by pilots, journalists, insurance adjusters, mechanics, and aviation enthusiasts.
Here's the thing though. FAA registration lookups aren't just trivia. They're a legal requirement for verifying aircraft airworthiness, confirming a pilot holds the proper ratings, and tracking ownership history when you're buying a used Cessna or Piper. The data is public for a reason: aviation safety depends on transparency. This guide walks you through every official FAA lookup tool, what information is publicly available, how privacy opt-outs work, and which third-party services add features the FAA doesn't offer.
We'll cover the N-Number registry at registry.faa.gov, airmen searches at amsrvs.registry.faa.gov, drone registration verification through FAADroneZone, and commercial tools like FlightAware and FlightRadar24 that build on this public data. By the end, you'll know exactly where to look, what to expect, and how to use these databases responsibly.
Even seasoned pilots underuse these tools. Renters skip the airworthiness check before takeoff. Buyers send wire transfers before confirming the seller actually owns the aircraft. Charter clients hop into Cirrus SR22s without ever verifying the pilot in the left seat has a current commercial certificate. Each of those failures has cost someone money or worse. The registries exist precisely to prevent that, and the friction is almost zero once you've done a few searches.
The FAA maintains these registries under Title 49 of the U.S. Code, which classifies aircraft and airmen records as public information. That means anyone, anywhere, can search them without paying a fee or creating an account. Most searches return results in under five seconds. You don't need a pilot license, a government ID, or any special permission. Just an N-number, a name, or a serial number.
Why does the FAA make this so easy? Safety and accountability, mainly. Mechanics need to verify an aircraft's airworthiness directives. Buyers want to confirm ownership chains and check for liens. Pilots verify each other's credentials before sharing cockpit duties. Law enforcement traces aircraft involved in incidents. Even insurance underwriters lean on registry data when calculating premiums. The system works because the data is open.
That said, public doesn't mean unrestricted. Pilots can opt out of having their personal address shown in airmen searches. Aircraft owners can request limited privacy through the FAA's PIA (Privacy ICAO Address) program for ADS-B equipped planes. We'll cover those options later. First, the basics.
Looking up an aircraft? Use the N-Number Inquiry at registry.faa.gov. Searching for a pilot or mechanic? Try the Airmen Inquiry at amsrvs.registry.faa.gov. Checking a drone? Head to FAADroneZone. All three are free, no login required, and update daily.
The main aircraft database lives at registry.faa.gov/aircraftinquiry. This is the official source. You'll see five search options on the landing page: N-Number, Name (owner), Serial Number, Make/Model, and Dealer. Each pulls from the same underlying registry but lets you filter differently depending on what you already know.
The most common search is by N-Number. Every U.S.-registered aircraft carries a unique tail number starting with the letter N, followed by one to five digits and sometimes a suffix letter. You see them painted on the fuselage or under the wings. Type the N-number into the search box (with or without the N prefix; it accepts both), hit submit, and you'll get a results page within a second or two.
If you're searching by owner name, the system matches partial strings. Searching "Smith" returns every aircraft registered to anyone with Smith in their name, which can be thousands of records. Narrow it down by adding a state filter or using exact-match formatting. For corporate owners, search the full legal entity name. Many LLCs and trusts own aircraft, so don't expect to find an individual just by searching their personal name.
Serial number searches are useful when you have the aircraft's data plate but not the tail number. Each manufacturer assigns its own serial sequence, so you might need to specify the make as well. Make/model searches are broader and return lists of all registered aircraft of that type, useful for shopping or research but rarely for verifying a specific plane.
One gotcha worth flagging. The registry's search engine doesn't tolerate typos well. A single wrong digit in an N-number returns either no result or a different aircraft entirely, and you'd never know. Always cross-check the result against the painted tail number or the aircraft data plate before acting on the data. For corporate ownership chains, follow the breadcrumbs. Many aircraft are held by Delaware-registered LLCs whose only purpose is asset shielding. Pulling the state corporate filings sometimes reveals the actual beneficial owner, though that's outside what the FAA registry tells you.
Registered owner name, mailing address, city, and state. The owner can be an individual, a single-member LLC formed for asset shielding, a family trust, a charter operator, or a major corporation. Each entity type has its own privacy and liability considerations.
Manufacturer name, exact model designation, year built, factory serial number, primary engine type (reciprocating, turboprop, turbofan, turbojet), and seat capacity. Useful for confirming the aircraft matches the description in a sales ad or insurance quote.
Current registration status flag (valid, expired, deregistered, exported, sale reported, in escrow), the original certificate issue date, and the renewal expiration date. Registrations now expire every seven years and require active renewal.
Airworthiness certificate class such as standard, experimental, restricted, limited, primary, or special light-sport. Also shows the date the airworthiness certificate was last issued. This signals whether the aircraft is legal to operate in normal civil airspace.
Unique 24-bit ICAO transponder code (also known as the Mode S hex code) used by ADS-B equipment, ATC radar, and third-party flight trackers to identify the aircraft. This is the key for linking registry data to real-time tracking systems.
Engine manufacturer, exact engine model number, rated horsepower or thrust, and number of engines installed on the aircraft. Combined with airframe data, this is enough to verify the aircraft's performance category and applicable airworthiness directives.
The pilot and mechanic database lives at amsrvs.registry.faa.gov/airmeninquiry. This is a separate system from the aircraft registry, so you'll need to navigate there directly. The search interface accepts first name, last name, and date of birth as inputs. Date of birth isn't required, but adding it narrows results significantly when searching common names.
Results show the airman's certificate number, ratings, type ratings, and any limitations. A private pilot will show ASEL (Airplane Single-Engine Land) and possibly instrument or commercial endorsements. A flight instructor will show CFI and CFII ratings. Mechanics show A&P (Airframe and Powerplant) and IA (Inspection Authorization) endorsements. The medical certificate class is also visible: First Class (ATP), Second Class (commercial), Third Class (private), or BasicMed.
The most useful field for verification is the issue date and current status. A pilot whose certificate is "current" holds an active rating. "Expired" or "surrendered" means they can't legally exercise those privileges. If you're hiring a charter pilot or instructor, this single lookup confirms whether they're actually authorized to fly you. It takes ten seconds and costs nothing.
Watch for a few common red flags. A pilot listed without a medical certificate can't legally fly passengers for hire, even if their commercial certificate looks current. A flight instructor whose CFI renewed more than 24 calendar months ago has technically lapsed (CFI certificates expire every two years unless renewed via Flight Instructor Refresher Course or specific recent activity). And any mention of "revoked" or "suspended" in the certificate history is a giant stop sign. Click through to the certificate details and read the dates carefully. The system shows you what you need, but it doesn't editorialize.
Search registry.faa.gov/aircraftinquiry by N-number, owner name, serial, or make/model. Returns the registered owner name, mailing address, certificate status (valid, expired, deregistered, in escrow), aircraft make and model, year manufactured, engine type and horsepower, airworthiness certificate class, and the unique 24-bit Mode S transponder code. Updated daily from official FAA records, free to use, no account required. The definitive source for U.S. aircraft ownership and certification data.
Search amsrvs.registry.faa.gov/airmeninquiry by first name, last name, and optional date of birth. Returns the airman's certificate number, certificate type (private, commercial, ATP, CFI, mechanic, dispatcher), ratings and limitations, medical certificate class with expiration, and any history of suspensions or revocations. This is how flight schools, charter operators, employers, and curious passengers verify that a pilot or mechanic actually holds the credentials they claim.
FAADroneZone holds Part 107 commercial and recreational drone registrations. The public lookup is far more limited than aircraft. Full owner contact data isn't openly searchable; the FAA reserves that access for law enforcement and authorized agencies. Citizens can verify Part 107 remote pilot certificates through the standard airmen registry, and Remote ID broadcasts (mandatory since September 2023) reveal drone location and operator location in real time through compatible apps.
FlightAware, FlightRadar24, ADSBExchange, PlaneFinder, and OpenSky Network layer real-time flight tracking on top of FAA registry data. They show live position, altitude, speed, heading, origin and destination airports, and historical route playback. Great for tracking specific aircraft, monitoring delays, or analyzing flight patterns. Not authoritative for ownership questions, where the FAA registry remains the definitive source. Free tiers cover most use cases; paid plans unlock multi-year history and API access.
Drones (sUAS, or small unmanned aircraft systems) over 0.55 pounds must be registered with the FAA. Recreational flyers register once and the same number covers all their drones. Commercial Part 107 operators register each aircraft separately. Registration runs $5 per drone for three years.
Unlike the aircraft registry, the drone database isn't fully open to the public. You can't type in a registration number and pull up the owner. The FAA publishes aggregate data and law enforcement has full access, but private citizens hit a privacy wall. The reason is volume and risk: with nearly a million drones registered, exposing every hobbyist's address would create unacceptable safety issues.
What you can do is verify a Part 107 remote pilot certificate using the standard airmen registry. The certificate number lets you confirm the pilot is licensed for commercial operations. You can also check Remote ID broadcasts (required since September 2023) using a phone app like Drone Scanner or Aeroscope. These broadcasts include the drone's location, the operator's location, and a unique session ID, but not the operator's name.
For drone sightings near airports or sensitive sites, report through the FAA's incident reporting form or call local law enforcement. Don't try to chase down the operator yourself.
If you're a commercial drone operator yourself, keep your registration paperwork organized. Your registration certificate (in physical or digital form) has to be available during operations, and ramp checks do happen. The FAA's MyExpress app stores a digital copy. Pair it with a printed backup tucked into your drone case and you'll never get caught short during an inspection.
If you're a pilot or aircraft owner who'd rather not have your home address splashed across the internet, the FAA offers a few opt-out paths. None are perfect, but they reduce exposure considerably.
For airmen, you can opt out of releasing your address through the Airmen Certification Branch. Submit a written request with your name, certificate number, and a statement that you don't want your address publicly displayed. Processing takes four to six weeks. After that, the registry will still show your name and ratings (those stay public) but will mask your street address. Phone numbers and email addresses were never published in the first place.
For aircraft owners flying ADS-B equipped planes, the FAA's PIA program assigns a temporary ICAO code that doesn't tie back to your N-number in third-party trackers. This is mostly used by celebrities, executives, and security-sensitive operators. To qualify, the aircraft must meet specific equipment requirements and the request goes through a formal application. It blocks tracking on FlightAware and similar services but doesn't hide registry data itself.
The Limiting Aircraft Data Displayed (LADD) program is a separate option that asks third-party flight trackers to suppress your N-number from public maps. Most major trackers comply, though smaller services may not. Apply through the FAA's LADD portal. The aircraft remains in the public registry but won't show up on real-time tracking sites.
The FAA registry tells you who owns an aircraft. Commercial services tell you where it's flying, where it's been, and patterns over time. They're built on a mix of FAA data, ADS-B receivers, and crowdsourced reports.
FlightAware is probably the most widely used. Free accounts give you live tracking, flight history for the past few months, and aircraft details pulled from the registry. Paid tiers unlock multi-year history, alerts, and API access. Useful if you're tracking a specific aircraft or trying to confirm whether a plane made a particular trip.
FlightRadar24 works similarly but has stronger European coverage. Their data feed includes military aircraft (where not blocked), helicopters, and gliders. The free tier is generous, and the paid Silver plan unlocks seven days of playback. Their iOS and Android apps let you point your phone at the sky and identify any plane overhead in real time.
ADSBExchange is the favorite for researchers and journalists because it doesn't honor most blocking requests. While LADD-listed aircraft disappear from FlightAware, they often remain visible on ADSBExchange. This makes it useful for accountability work but raises ongoing legal debates about the limits of voluntary opt-out systems.
Planeplotter, PlaneFinder, and OpenSky Network round out the field with niche features for hobbyists, academics, and security researchers. None of them replace the FAA registry as the authoritative source for ownership and certification, but they layer on the flight activity that makes registry data come alive.
Most registry lookups are perfectly normal. A flight school confirming an instructor's CFI rating, an insurance broker checking an aircraft's airworthiness certificate, a buyer running a title search before closing on a Cessna 172, a journalist investigating a corporate jet's flight patterns. These are textbook uses and the FAA designed the registry to support them.
Where things get messier is when registry data gets weaponized. Stalkers have used airmen address data to locate pilots. Some celebrity tracking accounts on social media post real-time flight movements of executives and entertainers, which has triggered safety concerns and lawsuits. The legal question of whether ADS-B-derived tracking constitutes harassment or speech is still being argued in courts.
For everyday users, the rule of thumb is simple: use the data for the purpose the registry exists to serve. Verify credentials, check ownership, research aircraft history. Don't combine registry data with other personal information to build profiles on individuals. Don't post home addresses publicly. Don't show up uninvited at someone's hangar because you looked up their N-number. Common sense applies.
If you're researching for journalism, accountability work, or academic projects, document your methodology and stick to publicly available data. The First Amendment protects most registry-based reporting, but the protections weaken when data is used to harass or intimidate.
Worth knowing: some states have begun layering their own privacy rules on top of federal aviation transparency. California, in particular, has explored restrictions on publishing real-time location data tied to private individuals. None of these state laws override the federal registry, but they can constrain how third-party trackers and journalists republish the data. If you're operating a tracking site or writing a story that names individuals, talk to a lawyer before going public. The registry is your starting point, not your safe harbor.
The FAA's public registries are some of the most useful aviation tools you'll ever use, and they're free. Whether you're verifying a pilot's ratings before a flight, doing due diligence on a used aircraft purchase, or just curious about that plane circling overhead, you have everything you need at registry.faa.gov and amsrvs.registry.faa.gov. Five minutes of practice and you'll know your way around both systems.
If you're a pilot or owner worried about privacy, the opt-out options (airmen address suppression, PIA, LADD) are real and effective for most use cases. They take some paperwork but they work. And if you need more than ownership data, FlightAware and FlightRadar24 layer on the flight activity that brings the registry to life.
The takeaway: aviation is one of the most transparent industries in the U.S. for good reasons. Use that transparency responsibly, verify before you trust, and remember that the same tools that let you research a plane can be used to research yours. Build your habits around that reality and the registry becomes one of your sharpest aviation tools.
Bookmark the two URLs that matter most. Registry.faa.gov for aircraft. Amsrvs.registry.faa.gov for airmen. Both load fast, both are free, and both will probably outlast every commercial tracker built on top of them.