Aerotas guidance has been consistent: standard projects often fall into a roughly three-to-five-business-day turnaround window, but the real answer depends on project size, complexity, data quality, and the exact deliverable requested.
What changes schedule the most
- Project size and total data volume
- Whether the work is processing only or includes full drafting
- Vegetation, corridor complexity, or unusual accuracy requirements
- Whether special add-ons or customer-specific standards are required
- Queue conditions and whether rush handling is available
Why quoted schedule matters more than generic ranges
The most useful schedule information is the fixed commitment attached to the quote. A generic range is helpful for planning, but the quoted turnaround is what should drive your project expectations. That allows Aerotas to match scope, staffing, and delivery promises responsibly.
Practical expectation: if the schedule is unusually aggressive, bring it up before data collection. Rush delivery is much easier to plan for than to rescue after the fact.
Rush work and schedule confidence
Aerotas can sometimes support accelerated timelines, but rush handling should be treated as a scoped decision rather than an assumption. The more clarity you provide on deliverable needs, project constraints, and timing up front, the more predictable the schedule becomes.