Legal Considerations
Meshtastic and MeshCore both operate in license-free ISM radio bands, but license-free does not mean unregulated. You must comply with applicable FCC rules for US deployments.
US regulatory framework (FCC Part 15)
In the United States, 915 MHz operation is governed by FCC Part 15 rules for ISM band devices. The key limits for intentional radiators in the 902 - 928 MHz band:
| Parameter | Limit |
|---|---|
| Conducted transmit power | |
| EIRP (with antenna gain) | |
| Duty cycle |
Antenna gain and EIRP
EIRP combines transmit power and antenna gain: EIRP = conducted power + antenna gain (in dBi) - cable loss.
IfThe youactual useFCC arule high-(47 CFR 15.247(b)(4)) is: conducted transmit power of 1 W (30 dBm) is the absolute maximum, and antenna gain external antenna, you may needup to reduce6 dBi is permitted at that full power. For every dB of antenna gain above 6 dBi, conducted power must be reduced by the transmitter'ssame outputnumber powerof todB. stayThe within theoften-cited 36 dBm EIRP limit.figure Foris example:simply the result of this rule at exactly 6 dBi of gain (30 dBm + 6 dBi = 36 dBm) - it is not an independent allowance to radiate 36 dBm EIRP with any antenna.
Worked examples:
Meshtastic'sMeshtastic defaultships transmitwith a region-based power settingscap; aresetting tx_power to 0 lets the firmware use the maximum the selected region allows. This is compliant foronly standardwhen antennas.paired Ifwith an antenna of 6 dBi or less. With any higher-gain antenna you upgrade to a high-gain antenna, calculate your EIRP andmust reduce TXconducted power ifper necessary.the 6 dBi rule above. The region setting is the master legal power-cap control - set it correctly first.
No amateur radio license required
Standard Meshtastic and MeshCore operation in the 915 MHz ISM band does not require an amateur radio license. The band is available to any compliant Part 15 device without licensing. This holds only while the device remains within its Part 15 certification: adding a non-certified antenna or amplifier, or exceeding the power/EIRP limits, can void the certification - at which point the operation is no longer authorized under Part 15. The operator is responsible for keeping the device compliant, and Part 15 devices must accept interference and must not cause harmful interference.
Always verify current regulations
Radio regulations can change. The information above is provided as a general guide. For definitive requirements, consult the FCC Part 15 rules directly.