Drone Guides

DJI Refurbished Drone from China

By LauThomasUpdated June 12, 2026
Quick Answer

  • Language: Connect your drone to the DJI Fly app, go to system settings, and select Deutsch (German)—if the language pack is missing, a firmware region change may be needed.
  • GPS & no-fly zones: Chinese-market firmware can show incorrect restricted areas in Germany; use DJI’s built-in geo-unlock request and verify your operator compliance with EASA and national CAA rules.
  • Remote & goggles: Region-locked DJI RC units or FPV goggles often require a factory reset and login with a European DJI account to pair properly.
  • Firmware flashing: Third-party “permanent fix” methods carry significant risks; we recommend checking with DJI official support before considering any non-standard flash.
  • Always: Rules change—verify operator registration and local flight restrictions with the German Luftfahrt-Bundesamt or your national aviation authority before flying.

Buying a refurbished DJI drone straight from the Shenzhen supply chain can save you a considerable amount, especially when you pick up a graded and bench‑tested unit from a specialist like Reboot Hub. Every drone that leaves our facility goes through a multi-point bench test by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians, and we are transparent about condition using our “Flawless” and “Pristine Pre-Owned” classifications. However, one question keeps coming up from European buyers: “I bought a DJI drone from China – how do I switch it to German, and what do I do about the region lock?”

This guide walks you through exactly that, using real-world experience without over-promising a “lower-risk” universal hack. We cover consumer drones like the Mavic 3 series (and what we anticipate for heavily rumoured models like a Mavic 4 Pro or Mini 5 Pro), the FPV system, DJI RC controllers, and even agricultural airframes like the Agras series. Whether you’re a wedding photographer in Berlin, a forest inspector in Sweden, or an agronomist in Spain, the underlying logic is similar – only the details shift.

Disclaimer: Regulatory frameworks, DJI firmware policies, and geo‑restriction databases change over time. The methods described here are drawn from user experience and official DJI guidance as of early 2025; they are not a guarantee of outcome. Always double‑check with the relevant national aviation authority (e.g. Germany’s LBA, Poland’s CAA, Sweden’s Transportstyrelsen) and DJI’s latest support resources before you fly.


Why does a DJI drone from China behave differently in Europe?

DJI manufactures region‑specific firmware variants. A drone originally intended for the mainland China market often ships with:

  • A simplified language set (Chinese and English only).
  • No Google Mobile Services integration, which affects map tiles and can cause offset GPS overlays.
  • A no‑fly zone database tied to Chinese airspace regulations, not EASA’s Open/Specific categories.
  • Remote controller or goggles firmware locked to a Chinese DJI account or phone‑region binding.

When you power up such a unit in Germany, the drone may still think it is in a Chinese regulatory environment. This can trigger false flight‑restriction warnings, prevent you from taking off in areas that are perfectly legal under EASA, or force you to navigate menus in a language you don’t speak. But it does not mean the hardware is defective. In most cases a combination of software settings and, in a minority of situations, a firmware cross‑grade can resolve the issue.

If you’d rather start from a known baseline, Reboot Hub’s refurbished drones are individually audited and we often note the factory region in our grading notes. It’s a practical way to reduce the chance of surprises—though we never claim a unit is “unlocked” unless it has been formally cross‑flashed by DJI.


Step‑by‑step: switching the language to German (or any EU language)

1. Start with the DJI Fly app

For almost all recent consumer drones (Mavic 3, Air 3, Mini 4 Pro, and the expected Mini 5 Pro / Mavic 4 Pro), language settings are managed through the DJI Fly application.

  1. Power on the aircraft, remote controller, and connect your phone.
  2. In DJI Fly, enter Camera View, then tap the three‑dot menu (usually top‑right).
  3. Go to System Settings > Language.
  4. If Deutsch appears in the list, select it. The app and drone will restart and apply the change.
  5. If only English and Chinese are visible, the drone’s current firmware image lacks the European language pack. You can try connecting the system to a stable Wi‑Fi network and checking for an over‑the‑air language download – some recent firmware versions bundle additional languages that install on demand.

2. When the language pack won’t show up

This is a strong indicator that you are running a Chinese‑domain firmware. Official cross‑grading to a global or European firmware is possible, but DJI controls the process. Reach out to DJI support in the region where you intend to operate. Be prepared to:

  • Provide the drone’s serial number and proof of purchase.
  • Clearly state where and how you will fly (e.g., “recreational flights in Germany under EASA Open A1/A3”).
  • Accept that DJI may, or may not, approve the switch – it is not automatic and there is no published “right” to cross‑flash.

Some user communities discuss offline tools that claim to flash a firmware package directly. We strongly advise against these for a pre‑owned or refurbished unit that you rely on for paid work. A failed flash can render the drone unresponsive, and it lowers the chance of later warranty or service support – even with a provider like Reboot Hub, undocumented modifications complicate repair.


Fixing incorrect no‑fly zones and GPS locking in Germany

EASA’s Open/Specific category framework sets clear rules for where you can fly a drone in Germany, but a Chinese‑region drone doesn’t know that. You may see red “Restricted Zone” warnings over parks or rural areas that are actually flyable under national law.

Geo‑unlock on the spot

DJI’s Fly application includes a self‑unlock feature designed precisely for these mismatches.

  • When you encounter a zone warning, the app will offer an “Unlock” option if the area is eligible.
  • You’ll need to confirm that you hold the necessary permissions (e.g., operator registration, insurance, and sometimes landowner consent).
  • The unlock is usually temporary and recorded. This provides documented verification of your flight intent – a useful record if you’re ever inspected.

Longer‑term regulator alignment

For frequent flyers, constantly unlocking the same area is frustrating. A more stable solution requires the drone’s flight controller to believe it operates in an EASA‑governed region. This goes hand‑in‑hand with the firmware language issue above. If DJI agrees to a region change, the onboard no‑fly database typically updates to the European version. However, no method permanently disables all DJI geo‑restrictions – the system is designed to coexist with, not replace, a pilot’s legal duty to check local airspace.

Before you fly in Germany, you must register as a drone operator with the Luftfahrt‑Bundesamt. Most consumer drones also need a drone liability insurance plaque. These obligations exist irrespective of what your drone’s screen tells you.

Rules change—verify your current status with the German CAA before relying on any in‑app unlock as your sole compliance measure.


Special cases: FPV goggles, DJI RC, and Agras agricultural drones

DJI FPV Goggles and Czech (or other) language settings

FPV goggles like the DJI Goggles 2 or Integra inherit region behaviour from the air unit they bind to. If you purchased a full FPV kit from China, the goggles may boot in Chinese and resist a switch to Czech, Swedish, or Polish.

  • Start by unbinding the goggles (system menu > reset) and binding them to a drone or air unit that is already running European‑region firmware.
  • Once paired, navigate to the goggles’ own language menu. Often the system will now offer additional languages.
  • If the desired language still doesn’t appear, the goggles firmware itself may be a Chinese edition. For goggles, official cross‑flashing paths are even narrower than for camera drones – contact DJI’s FPV support directly. In practice, some operators get around this by using a phone‑based viewer app that mirrors the feed in the phone’s OS language.

DJI RC region lock when pairing in the Netherlands (and elsewhere)

A DJI RC or RC 2 remote that came with a Chinese kit may show “region mismatch” errors or refuse to pair with a drone purchased separately in Europe.

  • Perform a network reset on the remote (pull down quick settings, navigate to Wi‑Fi/Bluetooth reset).
  • Sign out of the existing DJI account. If the account was registered with a mainland China phone number, the remote might be geo‑fenced. Create or log in with a DJI account linked to an email or phone number from the Netherlands (or your operating country).
  • Restart the remote, connect to a local Wi‑Fi, and attempt the pairing again.
  • If pairing still fails, DJI support can sometimes unbind the remote after you provide ownership verification. This is not guaranteed, but it’s a documented path for genuinely bought second‑hand equipment.

DJI Agras in Spain: language and operation area

Agricultural drones carry an extra layer of regulation. If you bought an Agras T40 or similar in Shenzhen and want to fly it in Spain, the same language and region logic applies, but you must also consider EASA’s Specific category operational authorization for spraying.

  • The Agras management app often includes a language setting independent from DJI Fly. Check if Spanish is available there first.
  • For region‑locked flight controllers that prevent operation outside China, DJI Agriculture has a regional support team that handles these transitions – reach out through the DJI Enterprise channel.
  • Under EASA, crop spraying falls into the Specific category and requires an operational authorization from Spain’s AESA. Do not attempt flights without documented permission; the drone’s geo‑lock is the least of your concerns if you are not legally permitted to spray.

The truth about “permanent firmware flash” solutions

A search for “How to Permanently Fix DJI Mavic 4 Pro Region Lock via Firmware Flash” shows just how badly some buyers want a one‑click answer. As of this writing, there is no official, lower-risk method to permanently remove region locks through a home firmware flash. What does exist:

  • DJI Assistant 2 (consumer or enterprise edition): In very rare cases, DJI support may push a region‑transition package that you apply via the desktop tool. This happens under a service ticket, not as a self‑service public download.
  • Unofficial patchers and firmware mods: These carry substantial risks. Applying modified firmware can conflict with future updates, break the GPS module’s authentication, or disable critical safety features. It also creates a strong indicator that the unit has been tampered with, which reduces the likelihood of repair coverage under most warranties – including the 180‑day warranty Reboot Hub provides on refurbished units.
  • Consider the operational reality: Even with a firmware region change, DJI’s geo‑awareness system will continue to flag airspace classes. There is no “stealth mode” override. The safest path is to pair an officially switched drone with proper operator registration and, where needed, specific unlock approvals.

If you’d rather not navigate these technical grey zones, see how Reboot Hub’s standardised grading gives you transparency on exactly what you’re buying. We document the factory firmware region whenever possible – it’s not a fix, but it’s documented information that lets you decide. (See The Reboot Hub Standard.)


Comparison table: region lock issues and practical approaches

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Problem Typical models affected What you can try Caveats & risk
Missing European languages (German, Swedish, Polish etc.) Mavic 3, Air 3, Mini 4 Pro, anticipated Mavic 4 Pro / Mini 5 Pro Check DJI Fly for downloadable language packs; request official firmware region switch via DJI support Homebrew cross‑flash may brick the drone; not every serial number is eligible
False no‑fly zones in Germany / Poland / Sweden All consumer drones with Chinese firmware Use DJI self‑unlock; ask DJI to update your unit’s regulatory region Temporary unlock requires re‑application; always cross‑check with national CAA charting
FPV goggles stuck in Chinese, no Czech/Swedish option DJI Goggles 2, Integra Unbind, pair to an EU‑region drone; check for firmware update; use phone‑based monitoring as fallback Goggles firmware changes are tightly controlled; workarounds may be limited
DJI RC “region mismatch” when pairing in Netherlands DJI RC, RC 2 Factory reset remote; use a European DJI account; contact DJI for unbind The remote may remain tied to the original purchaser’s phone region for anti‑theft reasons
Agras won’t accept Spanish and refuses to spray outside China Agras T10, T30, T40 Contact DJI Agriculture’s regional support; verify language in the management app EASA Specific category operational authorization is required; spraying without it is illegal
Firmware flash tools claiming a “permanent fix” Any model Not recommended. If you still pursue it, back up all parameters and accept full responsibility for the outcome High chance of voiding warranty, losing GPS stability, or causing fly‑away behaviour

FAQ

I bought a DJI drone from China and want to set the language to German – but only English and Chinese appear. What now?

A. First, make sure the DJI Fly app and drone firmware are both updated to the latest version via a stable internet connection. Occasionally, a language pack downloads in the background. If that doesn’t help, your drone is likely running a Chinese‑region firmware image. Contact DJI support with your serial number; they can assess whether an official region switch is possible. We advise against downloading third‑party tools that promise to inject language files—they carry notable risk and can cause future update conflicts.

How do I handle wrong no‑fly zone warnings on my Mavic 4 Pro bought in China and flown in Poland?

Even though a “Mavic 4 Pro” is still a rumoured model, the behaviour would follow the Mavic 3 pattern. Use the DJI Fly geo‑unlock feature at the flight location, and keep your Polish drone operator registration and insurance documents on hand. The Polish Civil Aviation Authority expects you to follow EASA Open category rules regardless of what the drone displays. For recurring flights at the same site, reach out to DJI to discuss a regional database change.

Can I permanently fix the DJI region lock through a firmware flash in Germany?

There is no official permanent fix that a user can apply at home. Some forums discuss flashing a global firmware image using DJI Assistant 2 or third‑party modding tools. Such procedures are not endorsed by DJI and can result in a non‑functional aircraft. If your daily business depends on the drone, we recommend pursuing the official DJI support route even if it takes longer—it preserves your future service options and produces documented verification of the change.

My DJI RC remote from China keeps showing “region mismatch” when I try to pair it with my drone in the Netherlands. Is there a workaround?

Yes. Start by resetting the remote’s network settings and signing out of any DJI account that was created with a Chinese phone number. Set up a new DJI account using a Dutch phone number or email, connect the remote to a local Wi‑Fi network, and attempt pairing again. If the error persists, contact DJI support, explain that you are the legitimate second‑hand owner, and request an unbind. Prepare the original purchase receipt if you have it. This process lowers the chance of a permanent lock‑out, but it is not instant.

How do I change the language to Swedish on a DJI drone bought from China for forest inspection?

The same principles apply: check DJI Fly’s language menu first. If Swedish isn’t offered, the firmware is likely a Chinese variant. For professional use like forest inspection, spending time on the official DJI cross‑grade path is worthwhile—you need reliable displays and correct map overlays. While waiting, you can operate in English, but make sure your flight logs and location data are captured correctly for client reporting and compliance with Sweden’s Transportstyrelsen drone rules.

I need to use DJI FPV Goggles in the Czech Republic with Czech language menus – but they only show Chinese. Any workaround?

Bind the goggles to an FPV drone or air unit that is already set to a European region. Once connected, navigate to the goggles’ system settings; often the language list expands. If Czech still doesn’t appear, the goggles firmware itself is likely a Chinese edition. For FPV goggles, DJI’s official cross‑flashing path is narrow—contact DJI FPV support with your equipment details. As a practical fallback, some pilots run a monitoring app on a tablet or phone, which can display the OSD in the phone’s system language, side‑stepping the goggles menu entirely.


Fly with confidence in Germany and across Europe

Bringing a DJI drone over from China doesn’t have to mean a permanent language barrier or constant geo‑lock frustrations. In most cases, a combination of careful in‑app configuration, a DJI account set to the right region, and official support requests will get you airborne in German, Swedish, Polish, or any other European language. The path demands patience—there is no “one‑click freedom” button—but it respects both local regulations and your drone’s hardware integrity.

At Reboot Hub, we know the supply chain inside out because we are based in it—our Shenzhen and Hong Kong workshop is where each refurbished drone earns its grade. While we cannot claim that every unit ships fully unlocked for Europe, our inspection process gives you a clear picture of what you’re getting. That means fewer variables when you sit down to sort out language settings and airspace maps.

Ready to find a precision‑inspected DJI drone that fits your European operation?

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