The drone industry is quietly diversifying beyond its imaging roots, with emerging trends for drone applications for 2026 including delivery, spraying and tracking.
Those fields are showing real growth — even if they’re still playing catch-up to the traditional leaders. That’s according to the Global State of Drones 2025 report from drone market research company Drone Industry Insights, which used data collected in mid-2025 based on a survey of 768 people within the drone industry spanning 87 countries.
Their survey found that delivery, spraying and dispensing, and localization and tracking have all crossed into meaningful adoption territory, each claiming between 5% and 7% of drone operations. These numbers might seem small compared to mapping’s dominant 35% share, but they represent something more significant: proof that drones can succeed beyond their original use cases.
The declining popularity of drone photography
To understand where the industry is heading, it helps to see where it’s been. Photography and filming —once the gateway application that got many operators into the business — is in steady decline. The Drone Industry Insights survey shows photography and filming now accounts for just 18% of drone operations, down from 22% in 2024 and 28% in 2023.
Now to be clear, this isn’t because fewer people want aerial imagery. Some drone photographers, like Eric Thurber, have landed unintentional second careers in the drone industry as videographers and photographers. I continue to see more promo videos of cruise ships and theme parks relying on drones. Yes, it is entirely possibly to grow a successful photography business, including in fields like wedding photography or real estate.
It’s just that these use cases are no longer the dominant force, reflecting the maturation of the industry.
“The creation of commercial imagery advances (geo-information, live footage) and is usually part of a larger mapping or inspection job,” according to the DII report.
The standalone aerial photography gig is becoming rare. Today’s construction site drone operator captures images as part of a mapping mission. The agricultural drone pilot takes photos while conducting crop health analysis. Photography became a feature, not a product.
It also means that other applications are growing, taking a piece of photograph’s pie. Those include:
Drone delivery
Drone delivery has been “the future” for so long that it became a punchline. Jeff Bezos unveiled Amazon’s drone delivery vision nearly a decade ago, and for years, the gap between prototype videos and actual service remained vast.
But 2025 is shaping up differently. The DII survey shows delivery operations now account for 7% of drone use. That’s a notable jump that reflects real deployments, not just test programs.
Funding to the drone delivery sector has remained surprisingly strong despite broader venture capital downturns. In the first seven months of 2023, seed and venture funding to companies in the drone and drone management sectors hit $1.51 billion, according to Crunchbase. That’s almost as much as the entire 2022 fundraising haul.
The biggest recipient? Zipline, the San Francisco-based delivery drone manufacturer that’s been quietly proving the model works, particularly in healthcare and remote delivery scenarios. Incoming Part 108 rules should make drone delivery even more widespread (the proposed rule on flying drones beyond visual line of sight dropped in June 2025).
Spraying
Agricultural drone spraying represents perhaps the most dramatic success story among alternative applications. Like delivery, spraying also captured 7% of the market, but unlike delivery, it’s solving a problem that farmers face every single season.
The appeal is straightforward: traditional ground-based spraying equipment is expensive, causes soil compaction and can’t easily access difficult terrain. Helicopter spraying works but costs significantly more. Drones hit a sweet spot. It’s more capable than ground equipment, yet far cheaper than helicopters.
Leading agricultural drones like the DJI Agras T50 feature 40-liter spray tanks, dual atomized centrifugal nozzles for fine uniform droplets and active phased array radar with binocular vision enabling 3D terrain-mapping and obstacle avoidance.
Tracking and localization
Perhaps the least celebrated but most practical alternative application is localization and tracking, which now accounts for 5% of operations. This category covers a range of uses from tracking livestock to monitoring equipment on construction sites to search and rescue operations.
Thermal and multispectral imaging makes drones ideal for assessing crop health, conducting search-and-rescue missions in low-visibility conditions and even managing livestock. A rancher can check on cattle across vast properties in minutes instead of hours. A construction manager can verify that equipment is where it should be without walking the entire site. Search and rescue teams can cover terrain that would take dozens of people on foot.
Why diversification matters
Don’t mourn the dropping significant in drone photography. Celebrate it.
The diversification of drone applications is essential for the industry’s long-term health. An industry that relies too heavily on one or two applications is vulnerable to technological disruption, regulatory changes or market saturation.
The agriculture, construction and energy sectors — the three dominant adopters according to the survey— are all finding uses for drones beyond simple imaging. Construction sites use drones for surveying, delivery of small tools and parts and thermal inspection. Farms use them for mapping, spraying and livestock monitoring. Energy companies employ them for inspection, delivery to remote sites and infrastructure mapping.
For pilots and companies trying to build businesses in this space, the message is clear: specialization in emerging applications can offer opportunities that crowded markets like aerial photography no longer provide.
Make a one-time donation
Your contribution is appreciated.
Make a monthly donation
Your contribution is appreciated.
Make a yearly donation
Your contribution is appreciated.
Did you enjoy this analysis of the drone industry? If so please consider making a one-time or recurring donation to TheDroneGirl.com. I write these stories as a side project because it brings me joy, but it also brings me web hosting costs.
The post Beyond photography: delivery, spraying and tracking gain ground as alternative drone applications for 2026 appeared first on The Drone Girl.
