Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

Customs Duty Guide

Updated June 11, 2026

Quick Answer

  • Check with the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) whether your drone model requires a registration or import clearance before it lands.
  • Confirm current Bureau of Customs duties and VAT with a licensed Philippine customs broker — tariffs and tax bases change, so treat any number you see online as outdated.
  • Verify that your shipment’s lithium batteries are packed and declared under the correct UN38.3 / IATA dangerous-goods rules.
  • Consider a refurbished unit from a seller that bench-tests and grades every drone (not just wiped-down returns) so you don’t import hidden damage.
  • Keep your purchase invoice, serial number, and any DJI flight logs — they help document ownership if customs asks questions.

A growing number of Filipino real estate professionals are buying drones from the Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply chain because the price-to-performance ratio of a refurbished DJI unit can be hard to match locally. But bringing a pre-owned drone through NAIA or a port in the Philippines touches three areas that make even experienced buyers pause: customs clearance, CAAP operational rules, and the reality of post-purchase support when the drone is needed for tomorrow’s shoot.

At Reboot Hub, every refurbished drone goes through a multi-point bench test by MOHRSS Level-3 certified technicians before it earns a “Flawless” or “Pristine Pre-Owned” grade. We ship from our China-based facility (Shenzhen/HK supply chain) so you aren’t guessing whether a second-hand unit has been properly revived — but we also want you to understand where your responsibility starts when the package reaches Philippine soil. That’s what this guide unpacks.


Understanding the Import Landscape for Drones in the Philippines

Two agencies will matter most while your drone is boxed up and in transit: the Bureau of Customs (BOC) and the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP).

Customs duties and taxes — what to expect

Philippine customs assesses import duty and VAT on drones, often classifying them under a specific harmonised tariff heading. Rates can shift between zero and double-digit percentages depending on how the item is coded, its declared value, and any trade facilitation measures in effect at the time of import. The only safe move is to engage a licensed customs broker who can look up the current AHTN code for “unmanned aircraft” or “camera-equipped quadcopter” and give you a landed-cost breakdown. Avoid relying on social-media posts or old forum threads that quote a fixed percentage — those numbers can be wrong by the time your shipment arrives.

CAAP’s role — registration and import clearance

CAAP is the national civil aviation authority for the Philippines. Depending on the drone’s weight, intended use (commercial vs. recreational), and capabilities, CAAP may require the drone to be registered and the operator to hold a Remote Pilot Certificate and an Operator Certificate for commercial real estate work. Some drone models may also need a type-acceptance or import clearance letter before they are released by customs. Rules evolve, so we recommend checking the latest CAAP memoranda directly or asking your broker to confirm with CAAP’s airworthiness division. This does not constitute a guarantee of smooth clearance — it’s simply the practical sequence most importers follow.

⚠️ Customs and CAAP rules change. Always verify obligations, tariffs, and document requirements with the Bureau of Customs, CAAP, and a professional customs broker before you ship. This article reflects a general operational view, not formal legal guidance.


Bringing a Shipment Through NAIA — What the Paper Trail Looks Like

Whether your refurbished drone arrives via an express courier at NAIA or sea freight for a larger order, clearing a package that originates from China (Shenzhen/HK supply chain) will usually ask for:

  • Commercial invoice that matches the declared value
  • Packing list detailing the drone, battery quantity, and accessories
  • Air waybill or bill of lading
  • Proof of payment (bank transfer confirmation, PayPal receipt, etc.)
  • Any CAAP import-related document if the model is on a watchlist or requires pre-approval

The more your paperwork ties the serial number of the drone to the invoice and to your identification, the fewer delays you’re likely to face. Some buyers also include a short letter explaining the drone’s purpose — “for personal real estate photography business” — which can help a customs examiner understand that this is a tool, not a bulk commercial shipment hiding undeclared inventory.


Lithium Battery Transport Rules for Drones in 2025

Nearly every DJI drone ships with an intelligent flight battery that is classified as dangerous goods because lithium-ion cells can pose a fire risk in the air-cargo hold. Transport regulations generally require that batteries:

  • Pass UN38.3 testing (all original DJI batteries meet this, and at Reboot Hub we include only authentic batteries in our refurbished units)
  • Be shipped at a state of charge no higher than 30% (standard practice for air freight)
  • Be packed in a way that prevents short-circuiting and accidental activation

Before you import, check with your courier or freight forwarder about any Philippine-specific lithium battery declarations or surcharges. If you’re hand-carrying a drone through NAIA on a personal trip, Philippine aviation security also enforces watt-hour limits on batteries — confirm the ceiling with your airline and CAAP beforehand.


CAAP No-Fly Zone Rules: NAIA, MOA, and Metro Manila Real Estate Shoots

Real estate shoots often take place within Metro Manila’s tightly controlled airspace. Both Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) and the Mall of Asia (MOA) complex sit under or adjacent to restricted zones that can trigger geofencing on DJI drones and require airspace authorisation from CAAP.

From an operator’s perspective, here’s what typically applies:

  • Flying within a certain radius of an airport is normally prohibited without explicit CAAP clearance. This affects properties around Pasay, Parañaque, and parts of Makati.
  • The MOA area is popular for development photography, but its proximity to NAIA means you’re almost certainly inside a controlled zone. We’ve seen operators successfully apply for a short-term flight authorisation, but it requires planning — same-day approval is unlikely.
  • DJI’s GEO zones can add an in-app unlocking step, but unlocking the drone via DJI’s system does not replace CAAP authorisation; it only satisfies the manufacturer’s geo-awareness layer.

For any commercial real estate campaign that needs drone footage near these areas, our recommendation is to contact CAAP’s flight operations unit at least two weeks ahead of your planned shoot and secure a written authorisation. Treat that clearance as part of your location checklist — just like a property owner’s consent.


Using DJI Flight Logs as Proof of Ownership

One of the queries we hear often from Filipino buyers is whether DJI flight logs can help prove ownership when importing a refurbished drone from China. The short answer is: they are a supporting piece of evidence, not a standalone ownership document.

DJI’s flight logs are tied to your user account and drone serial number. If you have the drone in hand and can show a flight history that matches your personal profile, it is a strong indicator that you are the operator. Customs officers sometimes accept a printed log summary alongside the invoice to verify that a drone is a pre-owned personal device rather than new commercial stock. Still, the primary weight rests on the purchase invoice and shipping documents. At Reboot Hub, we keep records that link each serial number to a sold unit — that paper trail can help if your shipment gets flagged for valuation review.

If you plan to register the drone with CAAP later, the same flight logs and purchase documents can smooth the ownership-verification process.


Warranty Realities: What If Your Imported Drone Breaks in the Philippines?

Buying refurbished often raises warranty questions, especially when the seller is overseas. Here’s how the warranty layer looks for a drone purchased from Reboot Hub and operated in the Philippines.

  • Reboot Hub provides a 180-day warranty on its refurbished drones. This covers hardware defects that arise from the refurbishment process or component failure during normal use.
  • Because the unit ships from China, warranty fulfillment usually means returning the drone to our facility. Shipping a single drone internationally for repair can be expensive and time-consuming — it’s a reality that every importer should budget for.
  • DJI’s own warranty ecosystem is designed for units sold new through authorised channels; a refurbished drone from an independent facility will rarely be accepted by a local DJI service centre unless it happens to fall under DJI’s original warranty period, which it typically doesn’t. We help our direct buyers with troubleshooting and, if a repair is needed, handle it through our own technician team.

This isn’t a sales pitch — it’s an honest trade-off. The upfront savings from a refurbished unit can be significant, but you’re swapping the convenience of walk-in local service for a more deliberate international returns process. If having a same-week repair option is critical for your real estate shoot calendar, factor that into your decision.


Choosing the Right Refurbished DJI Drone for Philippine Real Estate

Real estate marketing in the Philippines spans everything from tight condo interiors to sprawling beachfront subdivisions and mountain-view land parcels. Add the monsoon season, and suddenly wind resistance isn’t a spec you can ignore. Below is a practical comparison of DJI models that frequently appear in Philippine real estate workflows, all available refurbished and graded through Reboot Hub’s multi-point bench test standard.

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Drone Model Typical Fit for Real Estate Wind Handling & Monsoon Season Refurbished Value Note
DJI Mini 4 Pro Lightweight listing photos, social-media clips; easy to carry for agent walk-throughs Level‑5 wind resistance spec; manageable in moderate gusts but not a storm chaser Compact entry point for agents testing aerial content
DJI Air 3 / Air 3S Detailed exterior walk-arounds, medium-format property presentations Dual-camera coverage; the larger airframe handles coastal breeze better than Mini series Strong balance of sensor quality and price when refurbished
DJI Mavic 3 Classic / Pro High-end residential, golf resort marketing, land subdivision maps Heavier build with solid hover stability; often the choice during typhoon fringe weather “Pristine Pre-Owned” grade often delivers near-new image pipeline
DJI Mavic 3 Enterprise (Thermal) / Mavic 3T Dual-purpose: real estate surveys + post-disaster roof/solar inspection Robust airframe; thermal camera works for leak detection after a storm Niche but powerful if you offer both property marketing and assessment services
DJI Phantom 4 RTK (when available refurbished) Large land sales, topographic imaging for developers Older platform, but still respected for mapping-grade results in moderate wind Scarce; refurb availability varies — check current inventory

Note: All models listed are subject to availability in “Flawless” or “Pristine Pre-Owned” grades at Reboot Hub. Performance in extreme weather is always limited by manufacturer design; no consumer drone is rated for typhoon-force winds.

If you’re trying to pin down the best entry-level option for real estate photography in the Philippines, a refurbished Mini 4 Pro or Air 3 tends to give you enough 4K HDR quality for listing portals without over-investing while you validate demand. Agents covering resort properties or high-wind coastal sites often step up to a Mavic 3 series for the extra stability.

If sorting through specs feels like a second job, the Reboot Hub drone comparison tool can narrow things down by your actual use case — property size, wind exposure, and whether you also need thermal capability for damage assessment after typhoons.


Selling a Used Drone in the Philippines: Marketplace vs. Trade-In Route

When it’s time to upgrade, sellers in the Philippines typically weigh two paths:

  • Local marketplaces (Carousell, Facebook Marketplace, drone buy-and-sell groups): Reach a local buyer fast, but you’ll handle price negotiation, meet-ups, and the risk of a buyer who doesn’t understand that a refurbished drone isn’t “brand new.” Listings that include flight logs and original purchase documentation usually fetch higher offers.
  • DJI trade-in program: In select markets, DJI offers trade-in values for used units applied toward a new purchase. Availability and rates in the Philippines can vary, and refurbished units from third parties may not qualify. Check DJI’s official Philippine page or authorised retailers for current program rules.

There is no perfect formula — a well-maintained unit with a known service history often sells faster in a direct marketplace than via a trade-in portal, but a trade-in removes the overhead of dealing with individual buyers. Whichever way you go, keeping the drone’s grading and refurbishment record from Reboot Hub can boost buyer confidence because it documents exactly what was checked before the unit was sold.


A Reality Acknowledgment: Regulations Shift — Stay Current

We write this guide from the perspective of operators who move hardware across borders regularly, not as a law firm. Philippine customs circulars, CAAP memoranda, and local government drone ordinances over subdivisions or resorts can change between the day you order and the day the package clears. Before you press “buy,” spend 15 minutes verifying:

  • The current BOC tariff schedule for unmanned aerial vehicles
  • CAAP’s latest list of registration-required drone models
  • Any importer-of-record rules if your total declared value exceeds a certain threshold
  • Whether your target shoot location falls under additional local government permit requirements (some LGUs now require filming permits that include drones)

This kind of upfront checking lowers the chance of your drone sitting in customs for an extra week while you scramble for a document — and that matters when a property listing deadline is looming.


FAQ

What customs duties and taxes apply when I import a refurbished DJI drone from China to the Philippines?

Duties and VAT depend on the current tariff heading for drones and your shipment’s declared value. Because classifications and free-trade adjustments change, you should ask a Philippine customs broker for a landed-cost estimate using the actual AHTN code — don’t rely on old percentages quoted online.

Can I use DJI flight logs as proof of ownership when clearing a drone at NAIA?

They can be a helpful supporting document when combined with the purchase invoice and shipping paperwork. Customs officers sometimes accept flight logs to illustrate that the drone is a personal tool, but the official proof of ownership rests on the commercial documents that trace the transaction.

Do I need special permission from CAAP to fly a drone for real estate marketing near NAIA or MOA?

Yes, operation in the controlled airspace around NAIA and MOA typically requires prior clearance from CAAP. Even if you unlock the DJI geozone in the app, you still need CAAP authorisation to fly legally for commercial purposes. Plan ahead — ad-hoc approval is not guaranteed.

What happens if my refurbished drone breaks while I’m in the Philippines?

Reboot Hub’s refurbished drones include a 180-day warranty. Because our repair centre is in China, you may need to ship the drone back for service. Local DJI service centres usually do not cover units refurbished by third parties. Factor that shipping lag into your work schedule, especially during peak listing season.

Which DJI drone holds up best in windy Philippine typhoon-season conditions for real estate filming?

Larger/heavier models like the DJI Mavic 3 series have greater wind resistance and hover stability compared to the Mini line. No consumer drone is rated for typhoon-level gusts, but among the available options, a Mavic 3 Classic or Pro tends to perform more reliably in strong monsoon breezes.

Where can I sell a used drone in the Philippines, and is that better than a trade-in program?

Facebook Marketplace, Carousell, and local drone groups are the common routes for a direct sale. DJI’s trade-in program is another option if your model is eligible, though refurbished units may not always qualify. A transparent sale with the original Reboot Hub grading record often gets a faster response from private buyers.


Getting Started — Your Next Step

Importing a refurbished DJI drone from China to the Philippines isn’t a mystery, but it isn’t friction-free either. The right unit can transform your real estate listings — from static lot photos to cinematic orbit shots that sell land before a buyer ever steps on site — provided you prepare for customs, CAAP clearance, and the practical side of warranty support.

At Reboot Hub, we remove the first variable by ensuring every drone we ship is bench-tested, graded, and backed by a 180-day warranty. Whether you’re looking for a budget entry-point Mini, a dual-purpose Mavic for marketing and disaster assessment, or a mapping-grade platform for large land sales, we can help you match the hardware to the job.

Questions about how a particular model ships to the Philippines? Reach out to our team — we can walk you through typical shipping timelines and what documentation you’ll receive for a smooth clearance.

Related resources: the reboot hub standard · dji drone comparison 2026 · drone grading standard

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