The regulations in Illinois where I live are that it's trespassing under 300' without permission, regardless of FAA regs, and that conflict with federal FAA regs remains unresolved, and the trespass rule is in fact enforced in some localities in Illinois.
FAA's current posted recreational regs don't clearly explain, but I'll take Roger's word that the 2021 published rules no longer indicate it's trespassing. Sorting through code of federal regulations results in a cross-up mis-match of patches on regs on regs on regs, none of which address the issue of "airspace ownership" and trespass directly.
What I'll readily acknowledge here: There is still a lot of conflicting guidance and unclear rules in this space, best to be polite and have permission.
SRK
Roger Hogan Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> SR_Krause Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Well, actually.....
> >
> > No.
> >
> > You're trespassing if you're flying a drone
> over
> > private property without permission. That's
> their
> > airspace. I'm not fully familiar with the
> latest
> > FAA regs on drones, but you might want to
> review
> > the current regs to make sure you're on the
> > up-and-up.
> >
> > SRK
> >
> > Bryan Burton Wrote:
> >
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> > -----
> > > Thanks to drones this area can now be
> accessed
> > > with no trespassing.
> > >
> > > Regards,
> > > Bryan
> > > [attachment 78231 DJI_0710-Edit.jpg]
>
> SR_Krause, you should read the regulations before
> you post. A suggestion = Read the regs and then
> post you were wrong.