Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

How to Verify a DJI Seller's Business License in China for a Pre-Purchase Integrity Check

Updated June 09, 2026

Quick Answer

  • Ask the seller for their Unified Social Credit Code (USCC) or business license image upfront—legitimate operations share this readily.
  • Cross-check the details via China’s publicly accessible National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System (no cost).
  • Compare the registered name against DJI’s official authorized-dealer directory (check the “Where to Buy” or enterprise channel list on DJI’s site).
  • Treat a mismatch, refusal to share registration, or recently incorporated shell company as a strong red flag.
  • If you’d rather skip the detective work, a seller like Reboot Hub undergoes a multi-point bench test on every unit and backs refurbished drones with a 180-day warranty—transparency that mirrors what a verified license promises.

Bringing a DJI drone in from a Chinese supplier can unlock serious value—bulk pricing, access to refurbished units at hard-to-beat rates, and availability of models not always in local stock. But the distance also creates risk. A convincing storefront, a well-crafted Alibaba listing, or a responsive WhatsApp channel doesn’t prove the entity behind them is legally registered, authorized, or stable enough to fulfill your order without disappearing. This article walks you through a practical, free, and repeatable way to verify a DJI seller’s business license in China so you can make a purchase with far more confidence. It is not a legal audit, and it doesn’t replace local import compliance—always confirm with your own country’s aviation authority and customs agency—but it will help you filter out the most common impersonation tricks before you send money.

At Reboot Hub, we see the other side of this every day. Our Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply-chain operation puts us inside the ecosystem that overseas buyers want to verify. We hold a valid business registration, operate a genuine refurbishment facility with MOHRSS Level-3 technicians performing chip-level repair, and grade every drone through a transparent, multi-point bench test. If you want a seller whose credentials you don’t need to second-guess, that standard is already baked in. For everyone else, the steps below will arm you with a repeatable verification routine.


Why a Business License Check Isn’t Optional

A Chinese business license is the foundational document that proves a legal entity exists, states its registered scope of operations, and is tied to a physical address and legal representative. When a seller claims to be an authorized DJI reseller, that license should name a company whose scope includes drone sales, electronics trading, or import/export—and, critically, the registered name should appear on DJI’s own dealer lists or be verifiable through DJI’s enterprise channel.

Without this check, you can easily encounter:

  • Fake resellers using DJI’s branding without any commercial relationship, often shipping grey-market units with no warranty path.
  • Shell companies registered weeks earlier with minimal capital, designed to collect payments and vanish before a chargeback window closes.
  • Cloned storefronts that copy the visuals of a real business but operate under a completely different (or nonexistent) legal entity.
  • Misrepresented stock — the drone serial numbers may belong to stolen, locked, or previously crashed units, which a real DJI-authorized flow helps reduce the risk of.

None of these checks replace a physical inspection or a test flight. They document the seller’s identity, which is the first layer of integrity. When you combine a verified business license with a seller’s willingness to share serial numbers so you can run a DJI warranty check yourself, you’re far ahead of a buyer who simply trusts a catalog photo.


Step-by-Step: Verifying a DJI Seller’s Business License in China

1. Request the Essentials Early

Ask for:

  • The company’s full registered name in Chinese characters and the English name (if any).
  • The Unified Social Credit Code (USCC)—an 18-digit alphanumeric identifier found on every legitimate mainland Chinese business license.
  • A clear photo or scan of the business license. A legitimate seller will typically blur only personal mobile numbers, not the registration number or company seal.

A refusal to share the USCC or a “we’ll send it after payment” line is a strong indicator to walk away. Real manufacturers and resellers are accustomed to providing these documents for customs, banking, and distributor onboarding.

2. Cross-Check on the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System

China’s National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System is a free, government-run platform that lets anyone query a company by its registered name or USCC. You don’t need a Chinese ID to use the basic search, though navigating the interface may require a translator or some patience. What you’re looking for:

  • Business status: “Active” (in good standing), not revoked, cancelled, or under compulsory deregistration.
  • Incorporation date: A company that has existed for several years and maintains active annual filings is usually more stable than one incorporated two months ago.
  • Registered capital and paid-in capital: While not a hard rule, a micro-sized registered capital with zero paid-in capital can be a caution sign for a seller claiming to move hundreds of units a month.
  • Business scope: Look for terms like “drone sales,” “unmanned aerial vehicle,” “electronic products,” “import and export.” If the registered scope is food processing or construction consulting, the mismatch weakens their claim.
  • Administrative penalties and abnormal operation records: A clean record is preferable; repeated entries for operational abnormalities suggest a loosely managed entity.

Because the platform is public, you don’t need a special account or fee. If the seller’s details don’t match what you find, or the license number returns a different entity entirely, treat it as a failed check.

3. Verify DJI Authorization Separately

A valid business license proves the company exists. It does not, by itself, prove DJI has authorized them to sell new or official refurbished units. For that second layer:

  • Check DJI’s official website: DJI maintains an authorized dealer / “Where to Buy” search. Enter the seller’s location (China, and the city if you have it) and look for the registered company name. Not every single reseller is listed in the consumer-facing tool—large enterprise distributors sometimes operate under a different channel—but many are.
  • Contact DJI enterprise support: With the seller’s company name and USCC, you can ask DJI directly whether that entity is a recognized enterprise partner or authorized dealer. DJI’s support team handles these inquiries, and while they cannot share confidential distributor agreements, they can usually confirm or deny a formal relationship.
  • Beware of forged authorization letters: A PDF with a DJI logo is meaningless unless you can trace the company name on the letter back to a verifiable source. Some scammers edit genuine letters from other companies.

4. Layer on Alibaba and B2B Platform Tools (If Relevant)

If you’re sourcing through Alibaba, Global Sources, or Made-in-China, you have an extra set of verification signals:

  • Gold Supplier / Assessed Supplier status: This means the platform conducted at least a basic on-site check or third-party verification. However, note that this inspection focuses on the entity’s existence and production capability, not specifically on DJI authorization.
  • Trade Assurance: While this can help recover funds, it doesn’t verify a DJI dealership. A seller can be a legally registered electronics exporter and still have no genuine DJI supply chain. Pair Trade Assurance with the license + DJI authorization check.
  • Company profile consistency: Compare the registered company name on the Alibaba store with what you find on the official business registry. A mismatch often indicates a storefront rented from or posing as another entity.

5. Connect the License to Your Local Import Process

The license details can be useful beyond trust: many customs brokers will accept the seller’s business registration as part of the documentation package when clearing drones. A verifiable USCC and registered address makes it harder for a fake entity to provide fraudulent commercial invoices that would later cause customs delays. Philippine buyers, for example, can supply the seller’s registration to their freight forwarder as part of the shipment’s partner profile, while Kenyan and Canadian buyers may need it for import declarations or to satisfy local aviation authority requests for proof of purchase from a legitimate source. Check with your national aviation authority for any additional importer verification requirements specific to drones.


Red Flags That a License Alone Can’t Catch

A business license check significantly reduces risk, but it isn’t a guarantee. Even a licensed company can sell:

  • Locked or activated units: Drones already bound to another DJI account, often from fleet liquidations or insurance write-offs.
  • Refurbished units passed off as new: A license doesn’t force a seller to disclose whether a drone has been opened, repaired, or graded.
  • Bulk serial numbers from unknown batches: Without a grading standard, you may receive a unit that works today but shows hidden corrosion or prior impact damage tomorrow.

That’s where a structured refurbishment standard becomes the practical equalizer. At Reboot Hub, every drone passes through a multi-point bench test performed by technicians with MOHRSS Level-3 certification—the same skill level you’d expect for chip-level diagnostics. Our grading (Pristine Pre-Owned / Flawless) stays qualitative, not a vague number, and each sale includes a 180-day warranty on refurbished units. If you’d rather not do every license check yourself—or you simply want a unit where the hardware integrity and the seller’s identity are both already verified—explore the drones we’ve put through our standard at Reboot Hub’s grading page.


Quick-Reference Verification Checklist

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Step Action Green Sign Red Flag
License request Ask for USCC + business license copy Sent quickly, matches communication Refused, blurred beyond recognition
Registry search Query official credit publicity system Active, matching name & scope, aged Revoked, mismatched, or just weeks old
DJI authorization Check DJI “Where to Buy” or contact support Confirmed as official dealer/partner No record, seller avoids the topic
Platform signals Review Gold Supplier / Assessed Supplier profile Consistent name, years of membership Name mismatch, new account with high claims
Serial-number transparency Request one serial for a DJI warranty lookup Warranty status visible, not locked Locked, already bound, or seller refuses
Invoice information Review proforma invoice for company details Matches license information Different entity or missing registration data

Incorporate this checklist before every first-time purchase from an unfamiliar Chinese supplier. For a deeper side-by-side look at how different drone models hold up in the pre-owned market—and what you should expect from a genuine unit—our DJI drone comparison guide can help frame what you’re actually shopping for.


FAQ

How can a buyer in Kenya or the Philippines verify a Chinese DJI seller’s business license before importing?

Follow the same core path: request the USCC and business license, then verify the details on China’s National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System. Once validated, provide the seller’s registration information to your local freight forwarder and customs broker—they often use it to complete import documentation. Additionally, check with your national aviation authority (Kenya Civil Aviation Authority or the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines) to see if they require proof that the drone came from a legitimate commercial source when you later register the aircraft.

Is there an official 2025 DJI authorized reseller list for China, and how do I use it?

DJI maintains an authorized dealer directory on its official website, searchable by region. Search for the city or province the seller claims to operate in and look for the company name that matches the business license. Because DJI’s enterprise channel has multiple tiers, some bulk distributors may not show up on the consumer-facing “Where to Buy” page. When in doubt, contact DJI support directly with the seller’s registered name. This is the strongest documentation you can get without being inside the company’s partner portal.

How can I verify an Alibaba DJI seller’s business license for free?

Request the seller’s Unified Social Credit Code through Alibaba’s messaging tool. Copy it into the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System search bar. Compare the registered company name, status, and scope with what the Alibaba storefront displays. Also check the store’s Assessed Supplier or Gold Supplier report—Alibaba sometimes includes the verification company’s name, which should match. If the Alibaba profile name and the license name differ, ask for an explanation; a legitimate trading company may operate under a trade name, but the license should still point to the same entity.

What are the clearest signs of a fake DJI reseller in China during a license check?

The strongest signals are a refusal to share the USCC, a license that returns a completely different company (often with a scope unrelated to drones), or an entity that was incorporated only weeks before your inquiry. Additional concerns: the seller claims to be an “official DJI store” yet appears nowhere in DJI’s directory, or they send authorization letters that reference a different company name than the one on the license.

Can I verify a Chinese DJI dealer who claims to have a branch in Nairobi?

Ask for the business registration documents for the Nairobi branch in addition to the parent company’s Chinese license. If they are truly operating in Kenya, they should have a local certificate of incorporation or registration. Cross-check the parent name through the Chinese credit publicity system to confirm it’s the same controlling entity. Without evidence of a registered local presence, treat the claim as marketing until proven otherwise. For any Kenyan drone regulations tied to the importer’s status, check with the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority.

How do I tie a business license check to a real hardware inspection so I don’t end up with a locked or damaged drone?

The license check confirms the seller’s identity, not the physical condition of the drone. To close the gap, work with sellers who provide serial numbers upfront for a DJI warranty lookup, share a grading standard (like Reboot Hub’s multi-point bench test), and offer a clear warranty on refurbished units. If a seller refuses to share serials or can’t describe their inspection process beyond “tested,” a verified license alone won’t protect you from receiving a compromised unit. A transparent process on both fronts—legal and technical—is what consistently reduces risk.


Choosing a Path with Fewer Unknowns

Verifying a DJI seller’s business license in China is a free, repeatable step that takes less than 15 minutes once you know the routine. It doesn’t remove every risk—no single step can—but it filters out the most common impersonation schemes and forces the seller to prove that a real, active, and appropriate legal entity stands behind the offer. Combine that with DJI’s own authorization check and a willingness to walk away when details don’t add up, and you’ve already eliminated the majority of traps that catch unwary importers.

If you want the confidence that comes from a seller whose credentials are already built into how they operate, Reboot Hub offers a clear alternative. Our China-based supply chain, MOHRSS Level-3 chip-level repair capability, and 180-day refurbished warranty mean you don’t have to piece together a verification puzzle from thousands of miles away. See the full picture at The Reboot Hub Standard, browse our graded inventory with the drone comparison guide, or dive into our grading transparency to understand exactly what each drone goes through before it ships.

When the paperwork matches, and the hardware has been bench-tested to a documented standard, a cross-border purchase becomes a lot less of a leap.


Disclaimer: Business registration verification practices and DJI’s authorized partner programs may change. Always confirm with DJI’s official communication and the relevant Chinese government registry. For import regulations, drone registration, and operational rules, check directly with the national aviation authority in your destination country.

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