Drone Guides

Importing Forest Inspection Drones from China to Sweden

By LauThomasUpdated June 12, 2026
Quick Answer

  • When importing a drone from China to Sweden, you’ll need to handle customs clearance through Tullverket, declare the correct commodity code, and pay any applicable customs duty and import VAT.
  • Sweden follows the EU-wide EASA drone framework, enforced by Transportstyrelsen. Most forest inspection operations fit the Open or Specific category, depending on drone weight, proximity to people, and whether you fly beyond visual line of sight.
  • Every operator must register with Transportstyrelsen, and many commercial missions require at least an A1/A3 or A2 remote pilot certificate.
  • The rules are the same for new and used drones; a pre-owned DJI unit from a quality-refurbished source is treated identically as long as it meets technical requirements.
  • Always verify local requirements with Transportstyrelsen and Tullverket – regulations and rates can change.

Whether you’re mapping timber stands, assessing storm damage, or monitoring forest health, a capable inspection drone saves hours of ground trudging and gives you data that’s hard to capture any other way. High-quality pre-owned DJI platforms – especially those with thermal or zoom payloads – have become a practical, budget-friendly choice for foresters across Sweden. Many of these units are sourced from China’s Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain, where specialised refurbishment hubs like Reboot Hub apply a rigorous multi-point bench test and grade every drone as either Pristine Pre-Owned or Flawless. Buying from China isn’t complicated if you understand the customs and aviation steps, but it does mean you’ll need to navigate two distinct systems: Tullverket for import duties and Transportstyrelsen for flight rules.

If you’d rather start with a drone that’s already been through a documented technical check, Reboot Hub’s standard helps you focus on what to fly, not what to fix.


Bringing a Drone from China into Sweden: Customs and VAT Considerations

Goods entering Sweden from outside the EU must be declared to Swedish Customs (Tullverket). Even if the drone is for business use in forestry, it’s still a physical import, and the process involves a handful of consistent steps.

Commodity code and tariff classification Drones, camera-equipped multirotors and similar unmanned aircraft fall under specific headings in the EU’s Combined Nomenclature. The exact code depends on the drone’s weight, capabilities and whether it’s primarily designed for recreational or professional use. The rate of customs duty can vary, and some categories benefit from reduced or zero tariffs under trade agreements, so it’s worth checking the Tullverket tariff database or asking a customs broker to confirm the applicable rate for your particular model. Avoid guessing – a wrong classification can lead to delays or underpaid duties.

Import VAT In addition to any customs duty, you’ll generally owe import VAT on the total value of the goods (including shipping and insurance). The VAT rate applied is the standard rate used for goods in Sweden. Because rates are set nationally within EU frameworks, the exact percentage can shift; always confirm the current figure with Tullverket before finalising a purchase. If you’re a VAT-registered business, you can usually reclaim the import VAT in your regular tax filing, which turns it from a permanent cost into a cash-flow item.

Documentation you’ll likely need

  • Commercial invoice showing the transaction value, seller and buyer details.
  • Air waybill or bill of lading.
  • Proof of payment.
  • Packing list.
  • Any technical documentation that helps customs officers classify the device correctly (especially if the drone has specialised sensors like thermal cameras).

Paying and clearing Tullverket’s online service lets you submit an import declaration yourself, or you can engage a customs agent. The declaration will calculate duty and VAT. Once payment is arranged, the drone clears customs and is released for delivery. For foresters ordering a refurbished unit from Reboot Hub, the shipping partner can usually assist with the clearance process, but the importer of record (you, or your company) remains responsible for the accuracy of the declaration.

A note on used and refurbished goods Customs value is based on the transaction price, not the original new retail price. That can reduce the duty and VAT burden. A documented refurbishment – where a drone is disassembled, tested at chip-level, and reassembled to meet a published grading standard – gives you a transparent value basis and can simplify valuation discussions with customs. Still, always keep the grading report and purchase documentation handy in case Tullverket asks for evidence of the condition and price you paid.


Sweden’s Drone Regulatory Landscape

Sweden adopts the EU drone regulations set out by EASA, with Transportstyrelsen acting as the national civil aviation authority. For anyone flying a drone for forest inspection, this means you’ll operate under either the Open or Specific category, depending on the risk of the flight.

Open Category – The Starting Point for Many Missions

Most forestry flights with sub-25 kg drones can be conducted in the Open category, provided you meet these conditions:

  • You fly within visual line of sight (VLOS) at all times.
  • You do not fly directly over uninvolved people.
  • You keep the drone below 120 metres above ground level unless you’re flying over an obstacle.
  • You avoid flying in restricted airspace without permission.

The Open category is split into subcategories based on the drone’s weight and technical classification:

  • A1 (fly over people – but only with very light drones <250 g or privately built <250 g, or C1-class drones): Most forest inspection drones exceed 250 g, so A1 privileges are limited unless you have a C1-class drone and follow its restrictions.
  • A2 (fly close to people): With a C2-class drone and an A2 remote pilot certificate, you can fly as close as 30 metres horizontally from uninvolved people (or 5 metres in low-speed mode). Many prosumer DJI models, once retrofitted or classified under legacy rules, can follow transitional provisions that allow something similar.
  • A3 (fly far from people): For drones that don’t meet C-class requirements but are under 25 kg (typical for older or used DJI platforms), you operate in A3 subcategory – stay at least 150 metres horizontally from residential, commercial, industrial or recreational areas, and never fly over uninvolved people. In a remote forest a lengthy stand-off distance is often easy to maintain.

Important transitional rule: Until the end of 2025, drones without a C-class marking that were placed on the market before 1 January 2024 can continue to be operated in the Open category under certain conditions. A pre-owned or refurbished drone originally sold before that date can therefore still fly under A2 or A3 provisions, provided you hold the appropriate remote pilot certificate and the drone doesn’t exceed the weight limit. This is a strong indicator that buying a well-maintained older model can remain a practical approach through 2025 and beyond, though you should confirm transitional end-dates with Transportstyrelsen.

Specific Category – When Forest Inspections Go Beyond VLOS

Many professional foresters eventually want to fly beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) to cover larger blocks of timber, or to operate at night using thermal sensors. These kinds of missions typically push you into the Specific category. That doesn’t mean it’s prohibitive; it means you’ll need an operational authorisation from Transportstyrelsen. An authorisation is based on a risk assessment (often following the PDRA – Pre-Defined Risk Assessment – templates published by EASA) and covers things like:

  • The concept of operations – exactly what you’ll do, where, and under which conditions.
  • Mitigation measures – e.g., use of an observer, geo-awareness, or electronic identification.
  • Remote pilot qualifications – often requiring a Specific category theoretical exam and a practical assessment, or a recognised training certificate.

For night-time construction-site monitoring or thermal wildlife surveys, a Specific authorisation is commonly required because these operations often involve flying in lower-light conditions or close to infrastructure. The same process applies whether the drone is new or a refurbished model from China; what counts is the platform’s technical reliability, your operational safety case, and the pilot’s competency.

If you’d rather not do every check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard – every drone undergoes chip-level inspection and a rigorous multi-point bench test so you can focus on the flight, not the hardware unknowns.


Forest Inspection, Real Estate, and Other Commercial Use Cases – One Consistent Rulebook

A common point of confusion is whether different commercial applications – forestry, real estate photography, building inspection – follow different regulations. The short answer: in Sweden, a drone flight’s permissions are driven by the operational risk, not by the sector you work in. That means foresters, estate agents, and surveyors all work within the same EASA/Transportstyrelsen framework.

Real estate photography over 250 g If you’re using a drone heavier than 250 g for marketing photos of a property, you’ll fall into Open A2 or A3, assuming you’re flying nearby buildings. In A2, with a C2-class drone (or a legacy drone under transitional rules) and the A2 certificate, you can shoot close to structures with defined distances. In A3, you’d need to keep 150 m from urban areas, which often isn’t practical for property shoots. That makes the A2 certificate and a suitable drone a documented verification of competence many estate professionals pursue.

Building and construction inspection Inspecting roofs, facades, or construction sites with a thermal camera often means flying near structures and possibly over people who are part of the job site. Transportstyrelsen may treat the site as a controlled ground area, which can reduce the required separation distances if you have appropriate procedures. Night-time thermal work adds another layer: you’re operating beyond standard daylight conditions. In practice, many commercial operators apply for a Specific category operational authorisation that covers night operations and flights near buildings, listing thermal payloads as part of the equipment. Again, there’s no separate license for “building inspection drone” – the authorisation is scenario-based.

Forest inventory and monitoring A forestry mission in remote boreal forest, where the pilot maintains VLOS and keeps well clear of dwellings, often sits comfortably in Open A3. If you need to fly beyond VLOS to map a 500-hectare parcel, you’re looking at the Specific category with a BVLOS authorisation. The hardware you choose – whether a DJI Matrice with a multispectral payload or a Mavic 3 Thermal from Reboot Hub’s Flawless collection – doesn’t change the category you must follow, but it influences your safety case and the reliability documentation you’ll submit with an authorisation application.


Licensing: What Drone Certificates Does Transportstyrelsen Require?

Every drone operator – the person or organisation responsible for the flight – must register with Transportstyrelsen and display an operator ID on the drone. Registration is straightforward, done online, and applies regardless of the drone’s age or origin.

Remote pilot competency for the Open category

  • A1/A3 certificate: Required to fly drones under A3 subcategory (and A1 for light drones). The certificate is obtained by passing a free online theory test on Transportstyrelsen’s platform. It covers basic aviation safety, airspace, and regulations. For many forest inspection missions conducted over remote land, an A1/A3 certificate plus operator registration is sufficient.
  • A2 certificate: An additional theory exam (plus a self-declared practical component) that allows flights closer to people. If you plan to operate near forest roads, recreational trails, or building sites where you might come within 30 m of people, the A2 certificate gives you more flexibility.

For the Specific category You’ll need to demonstrate competency beyond the basic certificates. This might mean:

  • A theoretical knowledge test for the Specific category (often the STS – Standard Scenario – theory), or
  • An approved training course from an authorised training organisation (ATO), or
  • A practical assessment of skills, depending on the operational authorisation’s requirements.

Sweden doesn’t currently mandate a separate “commercial drone license” distinct from the EASA competency framework. If you hold the right certificate and your operation is authorised (where needed), you’re equipped for commercial forestry work.

Important: Certificates are issued to individuals, not to the drone. So whether you fly a brand-new drone from a local dealer or a Flawless-graded refurbished DJI imported from China, the pilot requirements are the same. There’s no separate permit tied to the drone’s purchase origin.


Practical Compliance Checklist for Foresters Importing from China

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Step What to check Notes & recommendations
1. Drone selection Weight class, Cx marking, sensor payload DJI Mavic 3, Matrice series and Phantom 4 RTK models are common. Confirm whether your chosen drone meets transitional provisions, or whether it already carries a C label.
2. Customs valuation Invoice price, shipping, insurance Prepare documentation that shows the refurbished condition and the purchase amount. Tullverket values used goods at the transaction price.
3. Tariff classification Correct HS code Check Tullverket’s tariff or use a customs broker. A wrong code can mean overpaying or triggering audits.
4. Import declaration Tullverket online or via agent Factor in any customs duty and import VAT. If sending via courier, confirm who handles clearance.
5. Operator registration Transportstyrelsen online portal Mandatory before first flight. You’ll get a registration number to affix to the drone.
6. Remote pilot certificate A1/A3 or A2, depending on mission Take the free A1/A3 theory test at a minimum; add A2 if you anticipate flying closer to people.
7. Flight permissions Airspace check, authorisation if needed Use DroneMap or similar to verify airspace restrictions. If you plan BVLOS or night ops, prepare a risk assessment and apply for a Specific authorisation.
8. Insurance Liability cover for commercial drone ops Transportstyrelsen requires appropriate insurance for operational authorisations; even for Open category, liability insurance is strongly advised.
9. Maintenance records Logbook, battery cycles, bench test report A professionally refurbished drone from Reboot Hub comes with documentation that supports ongoing airworthiness tracking.

This table isn’t exhaustive – rules change, and Sweden might update its national provisions – so treat it as a structured starting point and double-check with Transportstyrelsen and Tullverket before your first import.


FAQ

Swedish Drone Rules for Real Estate Photography Over 250g: What Do I Need?

In Sweden, a drone over 250 g used for real estate photography is generally operated in the Open category. You must register as an operator with Transportstyrelsen and hold at least an A1/A3 remote pilot certificate. If you need to fly close to the property – say, within 30 m of neighbouring houses – you’ll benefit from an A2 certificate and a drone that complies with the A2 transitional rules or carries a C2 marking. The same framework applies whether the drone was bought in Stockholm or imported from China; there is no separate real-estate-specific permit.

How Do I Calculate Import Tax and Customs Duty for a Forest Inspection Drone from China?

Import cost isn’t a fixed formula we can give without checking the latest tariff schedule, because it depends on the drone’s commodity code. You’ll pay any applicable customs duty rate on the CIF value (cost + insurance + freight) and then import VAT on the duty-inclusive amount. Use Tullverket’s tariff tool or consult a customs broker to get the exact classification and current rates. Keep in mind that a refurbished drone’s transaction price is typically lower than a new unit’s, which reduces the payable VAT.

Do I Need a Special Permit from Transportstyrelsen for Forest Inspections Using an Imported Drone in 2025?

Not necessarily. Many forest inspection flights that maintain visual line of sight over sparsely populated areas fall under Open A3, requiring only operator registration and a basic A1/A3 certificate. If your operation involves beyond visual line of sight, night flying, or flight near infrastructure that can’t be closed to the public, you’ll need a Specific category operational authorisation. The process is the same regardless of where the drone was manufactured, but you’ll be expected to provide evidence of the drone’s technical condition and reliability – documentation that a chip-level refurbisher like Reboot Hub can supply.

Is an RC Model Fly Certificate Required for a China-Bought DJI Drone Used in Forestry?

Sweden does not issue a standalone “RC model fly certificate” for drones. Instead, you follow the EASA competency framework. For most forestry tasks, the A1/A3 online theory certificate (free, via Transportstyrelsen) covers the minimum requirement. If you hold an older national certificate, you should check its validity under current EU rules with Transportstyrelsen. The purchase country doesn’t influence licensing; what matters is the operation you intend to conduct.

What Are the Transportstyrelsen Requirements for Night-Time Construction Site Monitoring with Drones?

Night operations are not permitted in the Open category, so construction site monitoring after dark falls into the Specific category. You’ll need to apply for an operational authorisation that includes a risk assessment addressing night visibility, lighting of the drone, observer requirements, and emergency procedures. Thermal camera payloads are commonly used for these missions. Whether you use a new or a refurbished drone imported from China, you must demonstrate to Transportstyrelsen that the aircraft’s lights and control systems are adequate for night use.

Are There Different Swedish Regulations for New vs. Used Forestry Drones?

No. EU drone regulations and Swedish national rules apply based on the drone’s technical specifications, not its condition at sale. A used drone that meets the legacy transitional rules can be operated identically to a new one. The practical difference is that you need to ensure the pre-owned unit remains airworthy. Purchasing from a refurbisher that performs chip-level diagnostics, replaces worn components, and issues a grading report (such as Pristine Pre-Owned or Flawless) provides documented verification of the drone’s state – a strong indicator that you can rely on it for commercial missions. Always check the specific model’s Cx class status and the end-dates of any transitional provisions with Transportstyrelsen.


Ready to Fly?

Navigating Swedish customs and aviation rules isn’t as daunting as it first looks, especially when you break it into a clear sequence: sort the import paperwork, secure your operator registration and pilot certificate, then match your mission to the right operating category. A reliable, professionally refurbished drone from Reboot Hub – with a multi-point bench test, documented grading, and a 180-day warranty on refurbished units – means you can spend less time troubleshooting hardware and more time over the treetops.

Rules, tariff codes, and national procedures change. This article provides general guidance based on public regulatory frameworks, not legal advice. Always verify the latest requirements directly with Transportstyrelsen and Tullverket before importing or operating a drone in Sweden.

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