Everglades National Park
Everglades needs no permit for small-group photography; permitted shoots pay a $200 application fee through the shared Everglades and Dry Tortugas permit office.
Guidance, not legal advice
Drone Authority
Check the flight side
Rules answer the ground-photo side. Drone Authority handles the NPS flight ban, airspace, and legal flying nearby.
Permit
Conditional
Issuer: Everglades and Dry Tortugas National Parks Special Use Permit Office (ever_sup_office@nps.gov, 305-242-7042)
Cost: $200 application fee when a permit is needed; still photography location fees $50/day (1-10 people), $150/day (11-30), $250/day (over 30)
Processing: Contact the permit office before your visit and prior to the activity
Groups of eight or fewer with hand-carried gear in public areas, without exclusive use or added cost to the park, need no permit under the EXPLORE Act. Content creators, commercial filmmakers, and media are all treated the same. Photography workshops run as a business may need a commercial use authorization.
Drone / airspace
Effectively banned: launching, landing, or operating a drone within park boundaries is prohibited
NPS Policy Memorandum 14-05 directs each superintendent to close the park to drone use under 36 CFR 1.5. For airspace, Part 107, and legal flying nearby, see Drone Authority.
Street / public space
Yes for personal and editorial photography throughout the park
Standard visitor photography is welcome; entrance fees apply even when no permit is needed.
Practical notes
- The Anhinga Trail delivers close-range wading birds and alligators from a boardwalk; it is the highest shots-per-hour location in the park, best in the winter dry season when wildlife concentrates at remaining water.
- Feeding or harassing wildlife is a federal offense; alligators that look approachable are the reason the rule exists. Long lens, no baiting, no call playback around nesting birds.
- Much of the park is water: backcountry access is by boat or paddle, and the Flamingo and Gulf Coast areas run on tide and wind as much as light.
- Summer brings daily thunderstorms and mosquitoes that will end a shoot; December through April is the working season.
Sources
Keep shooting
Knowing the rules is half the job. The craft side: