Drone Guides

Required Documents to Import a Drone from China to Chile with Personal RUT

By LauThomasUpdated June 12, 2026
Quick Answer


If you’re bringing a drone from China into Chile as a private individual, you’ll usually need:

  • A valid RUT (tax ID for natural persons, obtainable from the Chilean IRS).
  • A set of core import documents: commercial invoice, packing list, transport document (air waybill / bill of lading), and a customs declaration.
  • Depending on value, frequency and intended use, you may also need a customs agent and possibly DGAC registration once the drone is in Chile.
  • Agricultural or large spraying drones often trigger extra checks from Aduanas and SAG, and tax treatment can differ if you operate under a company (e.g., a Sociedad Anónima Cerrada).

This guide walks through the typical steps without overpromising. Rules change; always confirm your situation with Aduanas Chile, the DGAC and a local customs broker before shipping.


If you’re sourcing a drone from the Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain, you want a unit that’s already been through a serious pre-shipment check. At Reboot Hub, our MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians run every drone through a multi‑point bench test and assign a transparent grade—whether you pick a Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless unit—so you aren’t gambling on untested hardware before it ever reaches customs. That kind of operational confidence changes the import equation from “hope it works” to “one less thing to worry about.”


1. Why the personal RUT sits at the center of your import

In Chile, the RUT (Rol Único Tributario) is the single tax identification number used by both individuals and businesses. For anyone importing a drone as a natural person, the RUT becomes the key that unlocks the customs portal. You can obtain a personal RUT at the Servicio de Impuestos Internos (Chilean IRS) even if you are not a Chilean citizen; the process usually requires your passport and proof of a legal domicile in Chile.

When the shipment arrives, the RUT is linked to the Declaración de Ingreso (import declaration). Without a RUT, customs will often require you to hire a licensed customs agent (agente de aduana), who will then use their own credentials and charge a fee. For occasional, low‑value imports, some simplified procedures may exist, but drones regularly exceed the typical de minimis thresholds that allow paperwork‑light entry. As a rule of thumb, assume a personal RUT is necessary and plan to get one early.

Disclaimer: This section reflects typical practice. Import thresholds, required forms and exact procedures are set by Aduanas de Chile and the SII. We strongly recommend you check the latest official guidance before acting.

2. Pre‑import planning: picking a drone and setting the shipment terms

2.1 Choosing a drone that matches your use case

Whether you need a small DJI camera drone for personal photography, a photogrammetry rig, or an agricultural spraying platform, the model influences not just the cost but the regulatory hurdles. Heavier drones (especially those above 25 kg) may be subject to different DGAC operational categories and additional documentation for import. Our DJI drone comparison page can help you narrow down the features you really need, while our grading standard explains what each Reboot Hub grade means in real‑world reliability terms.

2.2 Negotiating the Incoterm with your Chinese supplier

Terms like DDU (Delivered Duty Unpaid) or DAP (Delivered at Place) are common when buying from China. Under DDU, the seller arranges freight but you handle import clearance and all duties/taxes. Under DAP, the seller delivers to a named place, still with you responsible for import formalities. If you have no local customs experience, you might prefer a door‑to‑door shipping service that includes broker assistance—just be aware that such convenience often costs more and you still remain the importer of record with your RUT.

Ask the supplier for a detailed commercial invoice that lists:

  • Full description of the drone (model, serial number, intended use)
  • HS code (harmonized system) if available
  • Country of origin (China)
  • Purchase price and currency

This invoice will be used by Aduanas to assess value and duties.

3. Document checklist: what you’ll likely need at the border

While the exact forms and requirements should always be validated with Chile’s Aduanas, most individual drone imports from China follow a familiar paperwork trail. The table below summarises the typical documents and their purpose, using cautious language because specifics can shift.

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Document Purpose Typical obtained from
Commercial invoice Proves value, origin and specification of the drone Supplier (Reboot Hub or other China‑based seller)
Packing list Details weight, dimensions and contents for inspection Logistics provider / supplier
Air waybill or bill of lading Transport contract; confirms shipment routing Freight forwarder or carrier
Customs declaration (electronic) Formal entry of goods into Chile; completed under your RUT You or your customs agent via the Aduanas web portal
Power of attorney (if using an agent) Authorises a licensed agent to clear goods on your behalf Signed by you; required when an agent acts as declarant
Proof of payment Helps validate the transaction value Bank transfer receipt, PayPal invoice, etc.
Certificate of origin (optional but helpful) May support claims for preferential tariff treatment under China‑Chile FTA Supplier or chamber of commerce in China

Many importers find that engaging a qualified agente de aduana streamlines the process and lowers the chance of a costly hold at the warehouse. The agent can confirm in advance whether your particular drone requires additional registrations from the Dirección General de Aeronáutica Civil (DGAC) or—for agricultural sprayers—from the Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero (SAG).

If you’d rather not spend hours double‑checking every single piece of paperwork against rapidly evolving rules, remember that a pre‑graded, bench‑tested drone from a supplier that understands export documentation removes one layer of uncertainty. See the Reboot Hub standard to understand the checks we already do before anything leaves China.


If you’d rather skip the deep document hunt and let a proven supplier handle the pre‑export checks, browse our Pristine Pre‑Owned and Flawless inventories with transparent grades—no vague claims, just bench‑verified hardware that’s ready for the paperwork journey ahead.


4. Customs clearance, duties and IVA: what to expect

4.1 Tariffs and taxes

Chile generally applies a 6% ad valorem customs duty on most goods imported from countries without a trade agreement. However, the China–Chile Free Trade Agreement typically reduces or eliminates duties on many electronics, including drones. The effective rate often drops to 0%, but some categories or accessories may still attract a tariff. Value‑added tax (IVA) of 19% is then levied on the CIF value (cost, insurance, freight) plus any applicable duty.

Be cautious with declared values that look artificially low; Aduanas has the authority to re‑estimate value based on reference prices, and under‑declaration can lead to fines. Paying a realistic price and keeping clear records is a practical way to manage risk.

4.2 Personal vs. commercial classification

Chilean customs watches for patterns that suggest commercial intent, such as frequent imports of identical items or quantities above a typical personal use threshold. There is no fixed “number of drones” that automatically triggers a commercial re‑classification. Instead, Aduanas will look at:

  • Frequency of imports in a given period under the same RUT
  • Total invoice value versus what is considered reasonable for personal use
  • Relationship between sender and recipient
  • Whether you are reselling or using the drone to generate income (e.g., agricultural services)

If customs determines the import is commercial, you may be required to register as an importer with additional tax obligations, and the IVA treatment can change (e.g., you might be able to recover IVA if you are a VAT‑registered business, but you also need to issue invoices for your sales). For an individual hoping to stay under the personal umbrella, a prudent approach is to limit the number of drones imported per year and be able to demonstrate genuine personal or hobby use.

4.3 The corporate gift twist

When a drone is sent as a corporate gift—say a manufacturer gifting a unit to a Chilean influencer or a business partner—the import can still attract customs duties and IVA. Gifts are not automatically tax‑free; Aduanas typically treats them like any other import based on fair market value. The recipient usually needs a RUT to clear the item, and the DGAC may still require registration if the drone will be operated in Chilean airspace, even on a non‑commercial basis. The safest route is to consider the gift as a normal import and handle the paperwork accordingly; any expectation of exemption should be verified with Aduanas Chile in writing.

5. What about agricultural spraying drones?

Agricultural drones—especially multi‑rotor or fixed‑wing platforms carrying spray tanks—sit at a crossroad of import, aeronautical and phytosanitary rules. In addition to the standard customs clearance described above, you may face:

  • SAG (Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero) requirements: Because the drone will apply chemicals, SAG may classify it as an agricultural input or equipment that requires approval, registration, or an inspection. The exact procedure depends on factors like tank capacity, whether you are mixing pesticides on‑board, and whether you plan to use it on your own farm or offer a third‑party service.
  • DGAC operational registration: Drones above certain weight limits or used for commercial operations (and spraying is almost always commercial) need to be registered with the DGAC and the operator must hold an appropriate license or certificate.
  • Customs valuation and tax implications: If the drone is imported by a company—such as a SAC (Sociedad Anónima Cerrada) or an SpA—the business can often recover IVA on the import, turning a potential cost into a credit. A natural person using a personal RUT cannot recover IVA, so the 19% becomes a final expense. That makes the choice between personal RUT and business RUT financially significant.

For anyone importing an agricultural drone, the recommended first step is to consult both a customs broker familiar with SAG‑regulated goods and a Chilean tax advisor before committing to a purchase. The rules are nuanced, and an error can result in the drone being held at the border or rejected.

6. DGAC drone regulations: what happens after customs

Clearing customs is only half the picture. Once the drone is in Chile, the Dirección General de Aeronáutica Civil (DGAC) applies operational rules that sit entirely separate from import law. These rules can affect whether you even need to register the drone, and if so, what documents you must present.

Based on internationally comparable frameworks (like the EASA Open/Specific category and Transport Canada RPAS), many jurisdictions tie registration and pilot competence to weight and use. In Chile, the DGAC has been aligning with similar risk‑based models, though the details evolve. Typically:

  • Very small, recreational drones operated in uninhabited areas may face minimal formalities, but you should still check with DGAC for the latest weight thresholds and whether any “personal use” exemption applies.
  • Drones used for any form of aerial work—photogrammetry, surveillance, spraying, delivery—are almost certain to require registration and a certified operator.
  • Importing a drone as a corporate gift does not exempt you from DGAC rules; if the recipient flies it, they step into the operator role and must comply with whatever category the drone falls into.

Since SGAC rules are updated periodically, the best practice is to visit the DGAC’s official channels or work with a local aviation consultant before you fly. No article can substitute for real‑time confirmation from the authority.

7. How many drones can a personal RUT import without a commercial licence?

The short, cautious answer: there is no single published number, and relying on a guess can be risky. Aduanas Chile assesses commercial intent on a case‑by‑case basis. However, operators have observed some patterns:

  • Importing one or two drones per year with a low total value and clear evidence of personal use rarely triggers scrutiny.
  • Importing several identical units in a short window, especially high‑value agricultural models, often raises flags and may lead to a request for additional documentation or a re‑classification as commercial.
  • Even if customs releases the goods under a personal RUT, the DGAC may later view multiple registered drones under one operator as an indicator of commercial activity, leading to licensing requirements.

If your intention is to import drones for resale, contracting, or a farming cooperative, the more compliant path is to set up a Chilean business entity (like an SpA or SAC) and obtain a business RUT. The difference between an individual and a business RUT is not just bureaucratic: a business can deduct IVA and manage warranties more transparently, which tends to be worth the extra upfront effort.

For the most accurate assessment, present your specific scenario to a Chilean agente de aduana or to the Aduanas help desk before you ship.

8. Bringing Colombia and Peru into the picture (briefly)

Although this guide focuses on Chile, the underlying questions that mention Colombia and Peru reflect a wider Latin American reality, so a few calibrated notes may help:

  • Colombia: The Colombian RUT (Registro Único Tributario) is required for most imports. A natural person can import a drone for personal use, but the DIAN (tax and customs authority) imposes value limits and may require a customs agent if the shipment exceeds certain thresholds. As always, check with the DIAN and the Aerocivil for drone operation rules.
  • Peru: The query “¿Puedo Traer un Dron de China a Perú para Mi Finca Sin Pagar Impuestos?” touches on a common hope. In practice, Peru’s SUNAT allows a modest de minimis exemption for personal shipments, but drones imported for a farm—especially if they are high‑value spraying platforms—typically exceed that threshold, making duties and IGV (Peruvian VAT) payable. Importing as a natural person with RUC (tax ID) may still be possible, but agricultural use might be considered commercial, affecting both tax treatment and DGAC licensing requirements.

In every jurisdiction mentioned, the core principle holds: obtain your local tax ID, establish whether the import is personal or commercial, and verify the applicable aeronautical authority’s rules before the drone leaves China.

9. Step‑by‑step summary for the typical personal import from China

  1. Get your Chilean RUT from the SII, even if you are a foreigner with a temporary domicile.
  2. Select your drone and supplier—ideally one that provides a detailed bench‑test history and transparent grading (the Reboot Hub standard illustrates what that looks like).
  3. Agree on shipping terms that clearly define who handles customs; DDU or DAP are common, but always have a local contact ready to clear.
  4. Secure the document set outlined in Section 3; double‑check the commercial invoice for accuracy.
  5. Before the shipment departs, ask a Chilean customs agent whether your specific drone model and value will require any special permits (SAG, DGAC pre‑clearance, etc.).
  6. File the electronic customs declaration under your personal RUT, pay applicable duties and IVA, and collect the drone.
  7. Register the drone with the DGAC if required by its weight and intended use; don’t assume a personal import automatically exempts you from operational rules.
  8. Keep all import records for at least six years (the typical tax audit window); you may need them if Aduanas or the SII ask questions later.

When you choose a drone from Reboot Hub, the China‑side logistics team is already in the daily rhythm of shipping to Latin America. Every unit is graded, bench‑tested, and backed by a 180‑day warranty on refurbished models. It’s not a guarantee that customs will be easy, but it does mean one less variable in the supply‑chain puzzle. See what’s available today, from Pristine Pre‑Owned to Flawless, and put your paperwork energy where it matters most—on the import side in Chile.


10. Regulatory reality check

Rules around import duties, IVA, personal use thresholds and drone registration can change with little notice. What is true for the early part of 2025 might shift by the end of the year. This guide offers a structural overview based on common practice and general parallels with international drone regulatory trends, but it does not substitute for direct advice from:

  • Aduanas de Chile (www.aduana.cl)
  • Servicio de Impuestos Internos – SII (www.sii.cl)
  • DGAC – Dirección General de Aeronáutica Civil
  • SAG – Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero (for agricultural drones)

We strongly suggest checking with at least one of these authorities and, for higher‑value shipments, hiring a licensed customs broker before you dispatch any money or hardware.


FAQ

Do I absolutely need a RUT to import a drone from China into Chile as a natural person?

In practice, you will almost always need a RUT. Customs uses it to identify the importer and assess duties. Without one, you would likely need to hire an agent who can clear the shipment under their own credentials, which adds cost and complexity. The process to obtain a personal RUT is straightforward even for non‑citizens; it’s a practical first step before any import.

What documents are required to import a spraying drone from China to Chile using a personal RUT in 2025?

The core documents remain a commercial invoice, packing list, transport document, and a customs declaration completed under your RUT. An agricultural spraying drone will very likely also require additional SAG‑related documentation, possibly an import permit or registration of the equipment. Because these requirements can vary with tank size and intended chemical use, check directly with SAG and a Chilean customs broker who handles ag‑input imports.

Can I import a drone from China to Peru for my farm without paying taxes?

Peru’s personal‑import exemptions are limited in value and usually apply to clearly non‑commercial, low‑cost goods. A farm spraying drone is typically high‑value and will almost certainly be subject to duties and IGV. The agricultural use also raises the probability that SUNAT and the DGAC view the import as commercial. A definitive answer requires checking your specific drone’s HS code with a Peruvian customs agent.

What is the difference between using a personal RUT and a business RUT when importing drones into Chile?

A personal RUT identifies you as an individual; you’ll pay IVA and generally cannot reclaim it. A business RUT (for an SpA, SAC, or similar) allows you to treat the drone as an asset and recover IVA as input credit, but you must comply with corporate tax filing obligations and may face a different inspection regime. The right choice depends on whether you plan to use the drone for income‑generating activity and how many units you’ll import over time. A Chilean accountant can model the net cost for your specific case.

How many drones can I import from China to Chile under my personal RUT before I’m considered a commercial importer?

There is no official published limit. Aduanas assesses commercial intent based on frequency, quantity, invoice value and apparent purpose. Importing one or two drones per year for personal recreation rarely causes issues. Importing multiple identical, high‑value units within a short span can prompt a review. If you suspect your pattern may appear commercial, request a preliminary ruling from Aduanas or engage a broker early.

Does a corporate gift drone sent from China require the same import steps and DGAC compliance?

Yes. A gift is treated like any other import: customs will assess value and charge applicable duties and IVA. The recipient needs a RUT to clear the item. Furthermore, once in Chile, operating the drone requires compliance with DGAC rules, regardless of how the drone was acquired. Thinking of it as a normal import with all the usual steps is the safest approach.


Re‑read the last line of the FAQ and the reality‑check section above. Now imagine starting your import journey not from a random AliExpress listing but from a supplier that has already bench‑tested, graded and prepared your drone for export. That’s the core of the Reboot Hub model. Head to the Reboot Hub standard to see how we define Pristine Pre‑Owned vs. Flawless, then visit our DJI drone comparison to find the right airframe. When you’re ready, browse our available inventory—every unit backed by a 180‑day warranty and the kind of supply‑chain discipline that makes paperwork a lot less painful.

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