2015 DR215

 is a stony near-Earth asteroid of the Atira class residing within Earth's orbit. It was discovered on 18 February 2015 by the Pan-STARRS 1 survey at Haleakalā Observatory at Maui, Hawaiʻi. The asteroid has a diameter of about 200 m and makes close approaches within 0.05 AU of Earth, making it a potentially hazardous object. On 11 March 2022, it made a close approach 0.045 AU from Earth, reaching a peak apparent magnitude of 17 as it streaked across the southern sky.

Discovery
was discovered on 18 February 2015 by the Pan-STARRS 1 survey at Haleakalā Observatory at Maui, Hawaiʻi. It was first observed at apparent magnitude 20.7, located in the southern sky 28 degrees below the ecliptic with an angular separation (solar elongation) of 76 degrees from the Sun. Follow-up observations from the Mauna Kea Observatory and Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory commenced, establishing an observation arc of 12 days until its discovery announcement by the Minor Planet Center on 2 March 2015.

On 5 March 2016, was recovered by the ESA Optical Ground Station at apparent magnitude 19, at solar elongations below 56 degrees. It was observed to be about 0.5 degrees away from its predicted positions in March 2016. The recovery observations significantly reduced the asteroid's orbital uncertainty, bringing its uncertainty parameter down from 9 to 3.

, has been observed for over 7 years, with a well-determined orbit at an uncertainty parameter of 0.

Classification
is one of a small number of Atira class asteroids that are orbiting entirely within the Earth's orbit. The taxonomic class of in the Bus–DeMeo scheme is Sr, indicating a stony composition.

Numbering and naming
As of 2023, this minor planet has neither been numbered nor named by the Minor Planet Center.