Drone Guides

Import Drone to Brazil from South Korea

By LauThomasUpdated June 12, 2026
Quick Answer

  • Any individual importing a drone into Brazil needs a CPF (Cadastro de Pessoas Físicas). Foreign citizens can obtain a CPF through a Brazilian embassy or consulate.
  • Customs charges apply to the CIF value (cost + insurance + freight); use the Receita Federal’s online simulator to estimate duties—never rely on a flat guess.
  • Used and refurbished drones are taxable, but well‑documented evidence of condition and value (including power‑on videos) can help avoid a valuation over‑ride by customs.
  • Gifts from individuals still trigger taxes when the declared value exceeds US$50; the “gift” label does not create an exemption for drones.
  • Once the drone is in Brazil, you must comply with ANAC RBAC‑E 94 registration and obtain DECEA SARPAS authorization for most flights.
  • Check official channels before acting — customs rates, NCM codes and registration steps can shift.

Brazil has become one of the most exciting drone markets in the world — for surveying, infrastructure inspection, racing and content creation. Sourcing a reliable DJI drone often means looking beyond domestic retailers, whether the seller is in Shenzhen, Hong Kong, Seoul or Los Angeles. If you’re reading this, you’re probably weighing an import from South Korea (or buying from a China‑based seller that ships via Korea) and trying to understand the exact customs arithmetic and the paperwork that makes the delivery possible.

We see the same questions over and over: Do I need a CNPJ just to bring in a single race quad? Can a South Korean national get a CPF without a local address? How is the duty calculated when the drone is a refurbished unit with a power‑on video? This guide walks through every layer — the CPF identity key, the duty‑calculation logic, the valuation of pre‑owned gear, and the operational registrations that follow. Along the way we’ll point out where a properly graded, bench‑tested refurbished drone (like the ones Reboot Hub ships from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain) can make the import process less of a guessing game.


1. CPF or CNPJ: Which Identifier Do You Need?

Brazil’s customs system is personal by design. Every import needs a tax identifier attached to the shipment, and the type of identifier depends on who is importing.

  • CPF (Cadastro de Pessoas Físicas) – for individuals. If you are a hobbyist, a drone racer, a surveyor working as a sole proprietor without a registered company, or anyone buying a single unit for personal use, you must provide a CPF.
  • CNPJ (Cadastro Nacional da Pessoa Jurídica) – for legal entities. A company, cooperative or registered professional practice can import under its CNPJ. This path may open additional tax treatment (like IPI and PIS/COFINS credits), but it comes with corporate obligations that rarely make sense for a single drone.

The short rule: an individual racing pilot or photographer needs a CPF, not a CNPJ. Even if you hear on Reddit that “CNPJ lowers the tax,” the administrative burden of maintaining a Brazilian company just to bring in one drone usually undercuts any savings unless you already operate a formal business.

How a Foreign Citizen Gets a CPF (South Korean, French, or Any Nationality)

You don’t need to be a Brazilian resident or hold a visa to obtain a CPF. The process for a South Korean citizen, a French citizen, or any other foreign national is roughly the same:

  1. Contact the nearest Brazilian embassy or consulate in your country. Many handle CPF applications directly. You’ll typically fill out a form (often available online via the consulate’s page), submit a copy of your passport, and possibly a proof of address.
  2. Use the Receita Federal’s digital service if you have a Brazilian proxy. Since mid‑2022, the Receita Federal has expanded electronic CPF registration for non‑residents through its e‑CAC platform, though you may need a Brazilian‑issued power of attorney or a trusted intermediary. The consulate route remains the most straightforward starting point.
  3. Expect a processing time of a few days to a few weeks, depending on the consulate’s workload. There is usually a small consular fee; you can confirm the current amount with the consulate directly.
  4. Once issued, your CPF number is permanent. Use it on every shipping label and customs declaration — missing or incorrect CPF routinely causes Correios to hold the package while you scramble to provide it.

If you are buying the drone from a China‑based seller (like Reboot Hub) with delivery to Brazil, you can hand your CPF number to the seller or the freight forwarder. The CPF must be linked to the consignee on the waybill.


2. The Customs Duty Calculator: How Charges Add Up

There is no single “import drone fee.” Instead, a stack of federal and state taxes is applied to the Declared Customs Value, which is the CIF (cost of the drone + insurance + international freight). Brazil’s Receita Federal provides an online simulation tool — Simulador do Tratamento Tributário das Importações — where you enter the NCM code, the CIF value and the origin country. We strongly recommend using that simulator for your exact numbers; the landscape can shift with temporary tariff adjustments.

The typical tax chain for a drone imported through Correios or a courier includes:

  • Import Tax (II) – a percentage of the CIF value. The rate varies by NCM classification.
  • IPI (Tax on Manufactured Products) – may apply even on finished consumer drones, linked to the same NCM.
  • PIS/COFINS – federal social contributions that hit most imported goods.
  • ICMS (State VAT) – collected by the state where the package enters or is cleared, often between 17% and 22%, calculated “por dentro” (on the cumulative value including other taxes).

Because ICMS is calculated on a basis that already includes the other taxes, effective total taxation can be high. Many Brazilian drone buyers report total import costs reaching 60–90% of the CIF value when shipping through Correios, but that is a window based on anecdotal data — the only reliable number comes from running your specific shipment through the simulator with the correct NCM code on the day you ship.

Classifying the Drone Correctly (NCM Tip)

Drones generally fall under a harmonized system heading for radio‑remote control apparatus. The exact NCM code changes over time; using an outdated or wrong code can trigger a higher rate or a customs challenge. Before you ship, verify the cargo description with a freight forwarder or check the current NCM table on the Receita Federal portal. If the drone is sold with a camera as an inseparable set, the classification may differ from a bare airframe. Getting the NCM right is one of the most effective ways to keep the tax burden predictable.

For pre‑owned and refurbished units — the kind Reboot Hub sells — the declared transaction value is often lower than the price of a sealed retail box. As long as that value is supported by a commercial invoice and consistent with the unit’s condition, it tends to be accepted by customs. This brings us to the next crucial layer: proving what you paid and what you received.


3. Refurbished, Used and Power‑On Videos: Valuation Strategies

A recurring theme on Brazilian forums and Reddit is the surprise when customs officers assign a higher value to a second‑hand drone than what the buyer actually paid. Customs authorities have the right to substitute their own valuation if they suspect under‑invoicing. That’s where documentation becomes your friend.

What works in practice:

  • A detailed commercial invoice that states the drone is “refurbished” or “pre‑owned,” lists the model, serial number, and price paid. At Reboot Hub, every order comes with an invoice that matches our public grading tiers (Pristine Pre‑Owned, Flawless) — no invented condition, just a clear description.
  • A power‑on video recorded with the serial number visible and a newspaper or tracking number in the frame. While a video does not formally over‑ride a customs valuation decision, many Brazilian customs brokers report that it serves as a strong supporting indicator that the drone is a functional used unit, not a new item disguised as used. If a broker requests evidence during clearance, having the video ready can reduce the chance of a costly hold.
  • Shipping‑label photos and unpacking footage are often recommended by the buyer community to document that the box contained exactly what was declared. This isn’t a legal shield, but it helps if you need to dispute a re‑appraisal.

What rarely works:

  • Declaring a drone as a “gift” with a low value when a commercial transaction clearly took place. Customs authorities scan for anomalies — a brand‑name DJI drone sent from a commercial hub in Shenzhen or Incheon marked “gift / US$20” will almost invariably be re‑assessed and may attract fines.
  • Declaring an absurdly low value that doesn’t match the model’s known market range. If the average used Mavic 3 sells for hundreds of dollars, stating US$5 invites scrutiny.

If you’d rather not do every valuation check yourself, a graded refurbished drone from Reboot Hub ships with a consistent invoice, a detailed condition note, and an inspection record — all of which can make the customs conversation more direct. See the Reboot Hub Standard →


4. The “Gift” Question: A Reality Check

Many online guides suggest marking an imported drone as a gift to circumvent taxes. Here’s the unvarnished reality under Receita Federal rules: a gift sent from an individual to an individual is subject to the same customs treatment as any other import, with a small value exemption. The traditional US$50 exemption for gifts sent via the postal service applies to the total declared value, including freight. A drone, by its nature, exceeds that threshold — even a low‑cost mini model with shipping will push past US$50. Above that limit, taxes are calculated in the same way as a commercial purchase.

If the “gift” is actually sent by a company (which is obvious from the shipper’s name and address), customs will judge it as a commercial shipment regardless of the label. The practical outcome: declaring a drone as a gift may slow clearance and attract a penalty for a false declaration, while doing nothing to reduce the duty.

The above‑board approach is to describe the shipment truthfully: a used drone purchased at X price, with a matching invoice. That removes the risk of a penalty and lets you argue valuation from a position of documented transparency.


5. Lithium Batteries: Hazmat and the Tax Stream

Drone batteries are tightly regulated by transport safety rules. They also follow the same import tax logic as the drone itself — there is no separate battery‑only duty schedule; the battery is part of the imported goods’ value and classification.

Key considerations when shipping batteries to Brazil:

  • Air transport compliance. Carriers require UN38.3 test certifications and often impose a state‑of‑charge limit (usually under 30%). Reboot Hub ships batteries in compliant packaging with the necessary documentation; if you source a drone elsewhere, confirm that the seller has these certificates.
  • Separate shipping may not reduce tax. Some buyers experiment with shipping the drone and batteries in separate packages to split the declared value under the US$50 threshold. Apart from raising the compliance risk (a drone without a battery may be classified differently and still attract duty if the total transaction value is known), the shipping cost for two parcels often cancels out any perceived saving. Moreover, customs can aggregate related shipments from the same sender if they see a pattern.
  • Correios and courier surcharges. Brazil’s postal service and private integrators add handling fees for hazardous goods. Ask your freight forwarder for a full landed‑cost breakdown that includes those extras.

6. After the Drone Lands: ANAC and DECEA Registration

Having the drone clear customs is only half the picture. To fly legally in Brazilian airspace, you must satisfy operational regulations. The two pillars are:

ANAC RBAC‑E 94

ANAC (Agência Nacional de Aviação Civil) requires registration for drones above 250 grams, and for all drones used in commercial operations regardless of weight. RBAC‑E 94 sets out the aircraft registration process, pilot age requirements, insurance obligations for commercial flights, and the identification plate rules. Registration is done via ANAC’s SISANT system. You will need your CPF or CNPJ, drone model, serial number, and a photo of the aircraft.

DECEA SARPAS Authorization

For flights in controlled airspace, near airports, above 400 feet, or for certain professional operations, you must obtain a SARPAS authorization from DECEA (Departamento de Controle do Espaço Aéreo). Even recreational flights often need it if you’re close to an aerodrome. The SARPAS request is submitted through DECEA’s online portal, and you should apply well before the planned flight — approvals can take a few days.

Neither ANAC registration nor SARPAS authorization exempts your drone from import duties, and the reverse is true: customs clearance does not cover your operational approvals. Treat them as separate to‑do items.

Rules change. Confirm the latest ANAC and DECEA requirements on their official portals before you fly.


7. Legally Lowering the Import Cost: What’s Sensible

The desire to “pay less tax legally” is fair, but in Brazil’s tightly structured customs regime the real opportunities are about avoiding overpayment rather than finding loopholes.

  • Professional import through a CNPJ. If you already operate a registered business that can legitimately import equipment, the CNPJ may allow you to recover PIS and COFINS credits and treat the drone as a fixed asset. This usually requires an accountant and ongoing tax filings — worth it for a fleet, borderline for a single unit.
  • Used‑value documentation. As discussed, a thoroughly documented purchase price with evidence of condition (invoice, grading report, power‑on video) reduces the chance of customs imputing a higher new‑retail value. Reboot Hub’s grading report and multi‑point bench test record offer precisely that kind of paper trail.
  • NCM accuracy. A fraction of a percent difference in the rate applied to a wrong NCM can ripple through the whole tax stack. Spending time with the NCM table or using a knowledgeable customs broker is a direct form of cost control.
  • Shipping method. Correios often charges a flat postal dispatch fee, while couriers may include brokerage fees. Compare the landed cost of each route with your freight forwarder; sometimes the “cheaper” tax route has hidden service charges.

None of these reduce the legal tax rate — they help you pay the correct amount, not less than what is due.


8. Comparison Table: Import Scenarios at a Glance

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Scenario Operator ID Valuation Approach Main Tax Levers Operation Hints
New DJI drone from a Korean retailer to an individual in Brazil CPF required Commercial invoice for retail price Full tax stack on CIF; ICMS varies by state Confirm NCM code with the retailer; use Receita Federal simulator
Refurbished drone from Reboot Hub (China) to an individual racer CPF required Invoice reflecting graded price and condition note Lower declared value may reduce duty base; power‑on video supports valuation Have grading report serial‑matched; provide CPF to seller before dispatch
Used drone sent as a “gift” from a friend in the US CPF of recipient Must reflect true market value or risk re‑assessment No gift exemption when value >US$50; taxes calculated as import Declare actual value; attach proof of used condition
Drone imported by a Brazilian company for surveying CNPJ Invoice to the company; CNPJ must match importer records Potential credit for PIS/COFINS (subject to regime); IPI may apply Engage a despachante aduaneiro (customs broker)
South Korean citizen moving to Brazil carrying drone as personal effects CPF (after arrival) Baggage declaration; drone may be considered a durable good Personal effects exemption may apply in some relocation contexts Consult a migration agent; rules for high‑value electronics are restrictive
Drone shipped with separate battery package to stay under threshold CPF Splitting invoice invites scrutiny; full transaction value can be reconstructed Rarely saves tax due to doubled shipping & handling fees Not recommended; compliant consolidated shipment is clearer

FAQ

Do I need a CNPJ or a CPF to import a DJI drone to Brazil for individual drone racing?

For personal use — including racing — you only need a CPF. The CNPJ is for companies. Even if you race in organized events, a CPF is the correct identifier unless you’ve formalized your activity as a business.

How can a South Korean or French citizen get a CPF number from abroad?

Contact the Brazilian embassy or consulate in your country. They will guide you through the form submission and document verification. Some consulates allow mail‑in applications, others require an appointment. Processing fees and timelines vary — check directly with the mission.

What taxes apply when importing a used or refurbished drone from China to Brazil?

The same tax categories that apply to new goods — Import Tax, IPI, PIS/COFINS and ICMS — are levied on the declared CIF value of the used drone. There is no special lower rate for refurbished items. However, a properly documented lower transaction value can reduce the taxable base, and grading reports help customs accept that value.

Can I declare the drone as a gift to avoid import taxes?

No. Gifts between individuals are taxable when the total value exceeds US$50, which a drone will almost always surpass. If the sender is a commercial entity, the shipment will be treated as a purchase regardless of the “gift” notation. Misdeclaration carries the risk of fines and delays.

How do I present a power‑on video to Brazilian customs to prove a drone’s condition?

If your customs broker requests supporting evidence, you can provide the video file along with the commercial invoice and any condition report. While the video does not have formal legal weight to change a tax rate, it is a practical tool that brokers use to demonstrate to a customs officer that the drone is a functional used unit, not a new product disguised as used. Keep the video unedited, showing the serial number and a date reference.

Are there special rules for lithium drone batteries when shipping to Brazil?

Batteries must comply with IATA/IMDG dangerous goods regulations, including UN38.3 certification and state‑of‑charge limits. Customs duty is calculated on the full value including the battery; there is no battery‑specific tax rate. Shipping carriers may charge hazardous‑goods handling fees — ask your forwarder to itemise those.


Bringing It Together

Importing a drone into Brazil from South Korea, China, the United States or anywhere else is a manageable process when you treat the three pillars — CPF identity, accurate customs declaration, and post‑arrival registration — as a checklist rather than a maze. The key is arming yourself with clean documentation, realistic expectations of the tax burden, and a willingness to use official simulation tools instead of rumoured numbers.

If you’re sourcing a pre‑owned DJI drone, the starting point matters a great deal. A unit that has been graded, bench‑tested and packed with a clear invoice takes a lot of the guess‑work off the table before it ever lands in the customs queue. Browse our inventory of refurbished DJI drones, compare models side by side, and read the details that support your import journey:

Every refurbished drone we ship includes a 180‑day warranty, our grading outcome and the multi‑point bench test record — all designed to help your drone arrive as described, so your attention can stay on the flights ahead.

Skip the gamble — every Reboot Hub drone is graded, bench-tested & warrantied.

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