Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

How to Update Firmware on a China-Bought DJI Drone That Doesn’t Support Vietnam

Updated June 12, 2026

Quick Answer

  • China-sourced DJI drones often ship with firmware that limits language packs, no-fly zone (NFZ) behaviour, and region-specific radio settings.
  • If your target country (e.g. Vietnam, Thailand, Chile, Spain) is not selectable during the firmware update, you cannot simply “switch firmware regions” — the update will not add that country’s profile.
  • Common workarounds: keep the original China firmware and fly with English, accept a nearby region, or — where DJI supports it — switch to a global firmware version if your hardware variant allows it.
  • Before you buy, choosing a unit already graded and bench-tested with firmware sanity checks reduces the mismatch risk. Reboot Hub validates language/region compatibility on every pre-owned drone we sell from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain.

When you import a DJI drone purchased in China, you’re not just dealing with a plug adapter. The firmware on Chinese-market units is built around domestic certifications, local frequency limits, mainland China geofencing data, and a curated set of languages. If the destination country doesn’t appear in the firmware dropdown, updating will not magically add it. This guide walks through what you can realistically adjust, what’s locked, and how to make a China-bought drone fit your operations without turning it into a paperweight.


Why China firmware behaves differently

DJI produces distinct firmware branches for the Chinese mainland and for the rest of the world. Even when the hardware inside two drones is identical, the firmware determines:

  • Language availability – A China firmware build typically includes Simplified Chinese and English, but may omit Thai, Korean, Spanish, Polish, or Vietnamese entirely.
  • Geozone / NFZ data – The no-fly zones embedded in China firmware are tuned for mainland China regulations. They do not automatically translate into the correct restricted zones for Spain, Brazil, or Peru.
  • Radio transmission and frequency – Output power, channels, and transmission protocols are locked to China’s SRRC requirements. In some regions, a drone broadcasting China-default settings may technically be non-compliant.
  • Flight safety updates – Updates pushed through the DJI Fly or DJI Pilot 2 app can differ by region. A China firmware drone may not receive the same safety database updates a locally purchased unit would.

Calibrated note: Region-specific compliance is complex and rules evolve. This article identifies patterns observed by international operators; it does not replace a check with your national aviation authority.


Checking what your China-bought drone currently supports — before and after an update

Before spending hours on firmware tooling, look at what your aircraft and remote controller already offer.

  1. Connect your drone and controller to the DJI app (DJI Fly, DJI Pilot 2, or DJI Go 4, depending on model).
  2. Go to the device settings or camera view menu and open “Language”.
  3. Note the list of available languages. If your target language is already listed, you can switch immediately — no firmware gymnastics needed.
  4. Open the “Firmware Update” section. Look at the region or model variant listed. If it says “CN” or “China”, the unit is on the China firmware track.

If your needed country does not appear under the language or region settings, a standard firmware update is unlikely to add it. This is the experience reported by operators flying in Vietnam, Thailand, Chile, and parts of South America.


The practical update process (and where it hits a wall)

When the DJI Fly/Go 4 app prompts an update

Plug-and-play updates are straightforward:

  • Keep the battery above 50 %, connect to Wi‑Fi, and let the app download the firmware package consistent with the drone’s current track.
  • The aircraft will reboot. When it restarts, the region, language set, and transmission parameters remain on the China track.
  • A firmware update alone does not convert a CN‑variant drone into a global variant.

If the app detects a mismatch — for instance, a Chinese aircraft paired with a UK‑version remote controller — you may see errors during binding or account login. In those cases, an “error updating RC firmware” can surface because the controller expects a global aircraft while the drone’s firmware identifies itself as CN. A practical approach is to keep both devices on the same firmware branch: both CN or both global. Mixed pairs often require careful manual selection of firmware packages and, sometimes, DJI Assistant 2 (consumer or enterprise version) on a computer.

Manual refresh with DJI Assistant 2 (when the app won’t cooperate)

For models that support DJI Assistant 2 on a computer, you can try manually refreshing or restoring firmware:

  • Download DJI Assistant 2 from DJI’s official support page for your drone model.
  • Connect the aircraft (and controller, if applicable) via USB.
  • The tool will offer “Refresh” or “Downgrade” options if firmware files are available.
  • If the tool shows both a “CN” and a “GL” (global) package, you may be able to switch tracks. This is model-dependent and DJI does not document a universal method.

Important caveat: On many recent consumer drones (Mini series, Air series, Mavic 3 series), the firmware binaries are locked to the hardware’s region identifier. Choosing a different region package can fail silently, leave the drone in a non-functional state, or void residual warranty from the seller. We recommend treating any cross-region flash as an edge-case exercise, not a routine step. Many agricultural operators in Peru and civil-construction teams in Brazil report that they ultimately accept English on the China-variant firmware rather than risk bricking the aircraft.


Language-specific compatibility snapshot

This table summarises what we see when a China-bought DJI drone is checked against common target languages. It reflects patterns reported by users and observed by our technicians during multi-point bench testing; it is not an exhaustive manufacturer declaration.

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Target language / region Typically available on China firmware? Typical workaround if absent
English Usually included Set English as primary; interface works globally
Simplified Chinese Always included Default
Spanish (Latin America) Rarely included on stock CN firmware Use English; Mandarin audio prompts may remain on some models
Thai Generally not present English only; third‑party app translation not reliable
Korean Generally not present English only; firmware region switch not consistently possible
Polish Generally not present English or German (if available)
Vietnamese Almost never present English only; some operators use a global-variant RC with mixed results
Portuguese (Brazil) Rarely included English or Spanish (if present)

Interpretation: If a language is absent from the firmware, updating through the app or DJI Assistant 2 will not add it. The drone will need to be operated in a language you are comfortable with from the available list.


What about “unlocking” no-fly zones on China firmware when flying in Spain, Brazil, or elsewhere?

Some search queries imply a desire to “unlock” or “remove” restrictive geozones that come from the China firmware track. This is a nuanced area.

  • China‑specific NFZ databases are tuned to mainland China airspace. When you fly in Spain, the drone does not automatically apply Spanish aeronautical geozones — it still applies its preloaded China database, which may be inaccurate or entirely permissive in a foreign airspace.
  • DJI’s Fly Safe system, when connected to the internet, can update on-the-fly geozone data based on your GPS location. In many cases, a China-firmware drone flown in Europe will eventually download the appropriate GEO zone data for that area, regardless of its firmware origin.
  • If the drone’s firmware blocks takeoff in a spot you know is legally flyable under local rules, DJI offers a self-unlocking process through their Fly Safe website for select zones. This process is tied to your DJI account, not the firmware region, and typically works for China-bought drones too.
  • Deliberately tampering with NFZ databases or using third‑party “unlock” software can create substantial legal exposure and, in some jurisdictions, violates communications or aviation law. We strongly advise checking with the relevant national aviation authority and DJI’s official GEO unlocking channels before considering anything outside the standard workflow.

A team using a China‑bought drone for civil construction in Brazil or agricultural surveys in Peru should plan for the extra step of self‑unlocking flight areas through DJI’s GEO portal. It is not a one‑click “delete all restrictions” switch.


If the firmware doesn’t support your country: a decision tree

Use this mental model rather than hunting for a magic update button.

  1. Is the language you need available now?
    - Yes → Switch language, fly.
    - No → Next step.

  2. Does DJI Assistant 2 show a global firmware package for your exact drone model?
    - Yes and you are comfortable with the risk → Research carefully; model‑specific forums can indicate historical success rates. Proceed with factory‑reset and manual refresh.
    - No → Accept English or return the drone if language is a deal‑breaker.

  3. Is the issue mainly about geozones?
    - Use official DJI GEO self‑unlocking. Check if the zone database updates via internet when on site.

  4. Is radio compliance a concern?
    - China‑firmware drones may transmit at power levels or frequencies not approved in your country. This is rarely enforced at the individual user level but can matter for enterprise certification. Consulting the local aviation authority is the correct path.

  5. Do you need Vietnamese, Thai, or Korean interfaces for regulated commercial work?
    - If that language is not present on your China‑bought unit, it probably won’t appear. In such cases, buying a drone already graded with a global firmware variant — or a unit explicitly checked for language availability — removes the gamble.

If you’d rather not perform every one of these checks yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard — each refurbished drone we sell is bench‑tested by MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians and its firmware region and language set are documented before it ships.


Firmware rollback: the Mexico scenario

The search query “How to Rollback DJI Firmware to an Older Version in Mexico After Buying a Drone from China” points to a real frustration. Sometimes a newer firmware update removes flexibility, introduces anti-rollback fuses, or changes behaviour you rely on.

  • DJI has historically allowed limited downgrades using DJI Assistant 2 on selected consumer and enterprise models.
  • Anti‑rollback security on modern drones (Mavic 3, Air 3, certain Mini 4 Pro batches) may prevent reinstallation of older firmware versions once a certain threshold is crossed.
  • If rollback is available, the assistant tool lists the permissible prior versions. You cannot flash an arbitrary old build.
  • Rolling back firmware does not change the region lock. It will not make a CN drone suddenly become a global drone.
  • For operators in Mexico who need a specific feature (e.g., altitude unlock that was present before an update), the only viable path is to check DJI Assistant 2 for available downgrade options and understand that once anti‑rollback is activated, the change is permanent.

We recommend treating firmware rollback as a troubleshooting step with documented verification, not a reliable solution for region mismatch.


Why a pre‑checked refurb makes language/region pain go away

The root of most problems described in the search intents — from Chile construction firms to Polish operators — is buying a drone on the China firmware track without realising the limitations that follow. A refurbished unit that has gone through a multi‑point bench test catches these mismatches before they leave the warehouse.

At Reboot Hub, our technicians note the firmware variant, available languages, and transmission region during grading. If you need a unit that supports Spanish, Thai, or Korean, we match your requirement to inventory that already carries the correct firmware branch. Because we are based in China’s Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain, we have access to both CN‑track and global‑track hardware — and we understand the difference. Every refurbished drone also includes a 180‑day warranty, so if a firmware behaviour causes unexpected issues, you’re supported.


FAQ

I bought a DJI drone in China and need the Vietnamese language. Can a firmware update add it?

If Vietnamese is not in the current language list of your drone, a standard firmware update through the DJI Fly app or DJI Assistant 2 is unlikely to add it. On China‑firmware drones, language packs are baked into the regional build. You can operate the drone in English, or check whether your specific model can accept a global‑variant firmware — but this is not universally supported and carries risk.

Does the DJI Fly app support Thai language on refurbished drones from China?

Thai is not typically included on drones with China‑market firmware, regardless of whether the drone is new or refurbished. You will likely see English and Simplified Chinese only. A refurbished unit that has been re‑flashed to a global firmware track by a knowledgeable technician may offer Thai, but this must be verified at the point of sale. At Reboot Hub we confirm language availability during our bench‑testing and grading process.

I’m using a DJI drone with Chinese firmware for agricultural work in Peru. Can I switch the interface to Spanish?

Many agricultural operators report that Spanish is absent on CN‑variant drones. If your unit does not list Spanish in its settings before or after a firmware update, the interface will not suddenly offer it. Accepting English is the most common workaround. For expanded language support, look for a drone that left the factory on a global firmware track or was professionally transitioned.

How do I unlock no‑fly zones on a Chinese‑firmware DJI drone when flying in Spain?

Use DJI’s official GEO self‑unlocking process via the Fly Safe website. The unlock is tied to your DJI account and typically works for China‑bought drones operating outside China. The drone will also often download region‑specific geozone data when connected to the internet at the flight location. Avoid third‑party “unlock” tools, as they can breach local regulations. Always verify flight permissibility with Spain’s national aviation authority.

Is the NFZ database update automatic for Polish operators using a China‑imported drone?

When the drone connects to the internet through the DJI app, it has the ability to pull up‑to‑date geozone information based on its GPS coordinates. This process can happen in the background and is not dependent on a full firmware update. However, if the app warns about a required update to fly, you should assess it on a case‑by‑case basis rather than assuming automatic compliance with Polish airspace rules.

Can I roll back the firmware on my China‑imported DJI drone to an older version in Mexico?

Potentially, if DJI Assistant 2 lists an older firmware version as available for your model. Anti‑rollback mechanisms may prevent downgrade on newer drones, and a rollback does not change the region or language set. It is most useful as a troubleshooting step if a recent update introduced a behaviour issue, but it will not convert a CN‑drone into a global one.


Make a cleaner start with your next drone

Dodging language gaps, region‑lock surprises, and NFZ confusion doesn’t have to be a post‑purchase discovery. At Reboot Hub, every pre‑owned DJI drone is graded as “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” by MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians who understand the firmware landscape inside a China supply chain. We verify the firmware variant and available languages so you don’t inherit someone else’s compatibility headache.

Each refurbished unit comes with a 180‑day warranty and ships from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong logistics hub — with the firmware picture clear before it leaves our bench.

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

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