Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

How to Verify DJI Drone Serial Number in Power-On Video Before Importing to Japan

Updated June 12, 2026

Quick Answer

Quick Answer

  • Get a power-on video from the seller that shows the serial number inside the DJI app (not just on a sticker).
  • Cross-check that in‑app serial number against the physical label on the drone’s body, the packaging, and any paperwork.
  • Use DJI’s own tools (DJI Fly, DJI Assistant 2, or the DJI support website) to check if the drone has been activated, bound to an account, or reported lost/stolen.
  • Understand Japan’s import and registration basics — JCAB/MLIT registration links the serial number to the owner; a clean, documented serial helps you avoid delays.
  • Choose a seller that does the heavy lifting — Reboot Hub provides serial‑specific grading, a power‑on walkthrough, and a 180‑day warranty so you aren’t verifying everything from scratch.

Importing a pre‑owned or refurbished DJI drone from China to Japan can be a smart way to get commercial‑grade equipment at a fraction of the new retail price. But it also puts the entire verification burden on you, the buyer — especially when customs clearance and Japan’s drone registration system expect a clear, traceable identity for the aircraft.

A power‑on video that displays the serial number has become one of the most practical pre‑shipment checks you can ask for. It doesn’t eliminate every risk, but it gives you a strong indicator that the drone exists, powers up, and isn’t simply a repackaged chassis. In this guide we’ll walk through exactly what to look for, how to validate that serial number across DJI’s ecosystem, what Japan’s import environment expects, and how a supplier like Reboot Hub is designed to take most of that work off your plate.

At Reboot Hub, every unit comes through a multi‑point bench test with serial‑specific documentation — so the video you receive reflects the exact drone you’ll unpack. See what that standard includes.


Why the Serial Number Matters When Importing to Japan

For a Japanese buyer, the drone’s serial number isn’t just a random string of letters and digits — it’s the key that connects the physical aircraft to regulatory compliance, ownership history, and resale value.

  • Japan’s drone registration (JCAB/MLIT) requires the serial number for any unmanned aircraft weighing 100 g or more. If the serial number you present doesn’t match what the drone physically carries, the registration process can stall — and you may end up with a device you cannot legally fly outdoors.
  • Customs clearance can also hinge on the serial number. Customs officials may ask for an invoice that explicitly states the drone’s serial number, particularly for used electronics. A mismatched or missing serial raises the chance of your shipment being held for inspection.
  • Theft and finance blocks are a real concern in the secondary market. DJI can remotely restrict drones that have been reported as stolen or involved in unresolved incidents. A clean, verifiable serial number lowers the chance that you’ll be stuck with a bricked device.
  • Warranty and repair history are tied to the serial. Without a clear serial, you can’t accurately check what service has been performed, which is especially important for refurbished models that may have had internal components replaced.

This is why a power‑on video isn’t a nice‑to‑have — it’s a solid piece of due diligence. When the video shows the serial number inside the operating system, rather than just on a repairable external sticker, you’re seeing evidence that the electronics you’re paying for are intact.


How Reboot Hub Approaches Serial Verification Before You Even Ask

Many sellers in China’s Shenzhen/HK supply chain will provide a serial number if you request one. Few go as far as integrating the serial number into a standardized, repeatable testing workflow. At Reboot Hub, the serial number isn’t an afterthought — it’s part of the condition report that defines our two main grades: Pristine Pre‑Owned and Flawless.

Internally, our MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians capture the serial number during the same multi‑point bench test that verifies flight performance, battery health, sensor calibration, and cosmetic condition. That same serial number appears on:

  • The physical label of the drone (cross‑checked against what the flight controller reports)
  • The grading certificate that ships with the unit
  • The power‑on video you can request before your order leaves our facility

The process is not a one‑time snapshot that can be reused across multiple listings. Every unit gets its own documentation. If you’d rather not spend hours verifying a seller you don’t know, the Reboot Hub Standard explains the entire workflow — from initial intake to the 180‑day warranty.


Step‑by‑Step: Verifying a DJI Serial Number Using a Power‑On Video

Whether you’re buying from Reboot Hub or another seller who agrees to send a video, here is a practical sequence you can follow. The goal is to move from “I see a serial number in a video file” to “I have reasonable confidence this is a legitimate, clean drone that I can register in Japan.”

1. Request the right kind of video

Ask the seller to record a single uninterrupted clip that shows:

  • The drone being placed on a neutral surface with no editing cuts
  • The drone powering on and connecting to the DJI Fly app (or DJI GO 4, depending on the model)
  • The app’s Device Information or About screen, where the serial number is displayed in software
  • For combo kits, include the remote controller and goggles, each navigating to their own About pages

A video that only shows the exterior label sticker isn’t enough — those stickers can be swapped. Seeing the number inside the operating system is a stronger indicator.

2. Note every serial number you see

Write down the drone serial, the remote controller serial, and if applicable the FPV Goggles serial. Each is an independent device and each can have its own history. Pay attention to format: DJI drone serials are typically 14–15 alphanumeric characters; goggles and controllers follow a similar pattern but may differ by length.

3. Cross‑check with the physical label

The drone’s serial number should also appear on a label inside the battery compartment or on a leg/arm. Have the seller pan the camera to that label in the same video or provide a separate clear photo. Mismatches here — where the app shows one number and the chassis shows another — are a red flag that at minimum demands a detailed explanation.

4. Use DJI’s own verification tools

With the serial numbers in hand, you can check their status using:

  • DJI Fly app (Profile > Device Management) — if the drone is still bound to another DJI account, that will appear here
  • DJI’s official support/service verification page — entering a serial number can confirm the model and warranty status; a drone reported as stolen or banned from DJI’s network may return an error or restricted status
  • DJI Assistant 2 (desktop) — when connected, it reads the serial number directly from the flight controller; this is useful after you receive the drone, as a final confirmation

These checks are not a substitute for law‑enforcement records, but they give you strong clues about whether the drone has been reported through DJI’s own channel.

5. For DJI FPV Goggles specifically

The serial number for FPV Goggles can be found directly in the goggles’ menu (Settings > About) or in the connected DJI Fly app when the goggles are powered on. Ask the seller to display this screen during the video. The same cross‑check logic applies: goggles serials should match the sticker on the device and the packaging.


Checking Serial Numbers Against Japan’s Stolen Goods Records

A natural question for any Japanese buyer is whether there is a national “blacklist” database where you can run a serial number to see if a drone has been reported stolen. The reality is more nuanced.

Japan does not operate a single public‑facing database of stolen drone serials. However, local police stations maintain theft reports, and they can check a serial number against their records if you provide it. For a buyer who wants to be thorough, visiting or calling the police station in your jurisdiction with the serial number in hand is a practical — if high‑effort — step.

In parallel, DJI’s own ecosystem can act as a filter. If a previous owner reported the drone as lost or stolen through DJI’s channels, the device will often be flagged when you attempt to bind it to your account. Running the serial through DJI’s verification tools (step 4 above) surfaces that information before you import.

What about importing via Hong Kong? Many pre‑owned DJI units are sold by China‑based refurbishers that ship through the Shenzhen/Hong Kong logistics corridor. The verification process doesn’t change based on the shipping route — you still need a clean serial and a documentation trail that satisfies Japan Customs. If a seller’s listing emphasizes “Hong Kong shipping” but cannot provide a power‑on video with the serial number in‑app, treat that as a warning sign, not a convenience.

For any specific record‑check process beyond these steps, we recommend contacting your local police or Japan’s relevant aviation authority directly. Regulations and police‑database access can shift, and only an official source can give you the current situation.


What Japan Customs and JCAB Registration Expect

While we can’t list exact statute numbers or guarantee what a customs officer will ask for on any specific day, we can describe the pattern that consistently emerges from buyers importing drones into Japan.

  • Commercial invoice with serial number: Shipments of used electronics are often flagged for value verification. An invoice that lists the drone’s model, serial number, purchase price, and country of origin gives Customs a concrete document to work with and reduces the chance of delays.
  • Drone registration readiness: JCAB/MLIT requires online registration for drones over 100 g. The registration form asks for the drone’s serial number, among other details. Having that number verified before the drone arrives means you can begin the registration process immediately — not after you discover a discrepancy.
  • Proof of purchase and warranty: If Customs questions the declared value, a receipt or grading certificate that includes the serial number can help demonstrate that the price you paid is genuine. Reboot Hub’s grading reports serve this function naturally because they tie the unit’s tested condition to a specific serial.

Because customs and registration requirements can be updated at any time, we recommend confirming the latest document checklist with Japan Customs and JCAB/MLIT before finalizing an import. A power‑on video won’t replace official advice, but it builds a documentation trail that makes those conversations easier.

If you’d rather not perform every cross‑check yourself, consider the Reboot Hub standard — where serial‑specific videos and grading sheets are part of the normal pre‑shipment packet.


Self‑Verification vs. Pre‑Verified Purchase: A Comparison

The table below outlines what typical self‑verification involves when buying from an unverified seller, compared with what comes standard when you purchase a Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless unit from Reboot Hub.

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Verification step Doing it yourself with an unknown seller Reboot Hub purchase
Request power‑on video Must negotiate; seller may refuse or send an old file Included in pre‑shipment quality check
Serial in video matches physical label You check manually across photos Verified during multi‑point bench test
DJI account binding status You must obtain serial, then check via DJI tools Checked during testing; units unbound before grading
Japan‑ready documentation You assemble invoice, serial record, and grade proof Grading report with serial, plus commercial invoice provided
Stolen/lost drone risk Hard to assess without police or DJI tools Clean‑status indication from DJI‑side check; no guarantee, but lower risk
Post‑arrival warranty Depends on seller; often no meaningful warranty 180‑day warranty on refurbished units
Grading consistency Inconsistent; seller‑specific Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless standard, with grading definitions

This comparison isn’t meant to suggest that self‑verification is impossible — many experienced buyers do it successfully. It simply highlights which tasks Reboot Hub takes on so you can weigh the effort against your own time tolerance.


A Quick Word on Chinese Refurbisher Seller Check Lists

If you’re evaluating a seller you found independently, here’s a concise checklist you can apply before committing to a purchase. Use it alongside the serial‑verification steps above.

  • Video evidence: Do they provide a current, uncut power‑on video with the serial number in the app?
  • Physical label consistency: Do the drone, remote, and goggles serials all match the video and packaging?
  • Account unbinding proof: Can they show that the drone is unbound from any previous DJI account?
  • Japan import readiness: Are they willing to put the serial number on the commercial invoice?
  • Warranty terms: Is there a clear warranty period, and what does it cover?
  • Grading clarity: Do they use defined grades, or is everything just “like new”? (At Reboot Hub, each grade has a published standard.)

Even if a seller passes this checklist, we recommend operating as if some risk remains — no remote purchase can be 100 % lower-risk. That’s the honest operator’s view.


FAQ

Can I verify a DJI drone’s serial number before importing it into Japan without having the physical drone in hand?

Yes. A power‑on video that shows the serial number inside the DJI app is the next best thing. Combine it with a serial lookup on DJI’s support page or through the DJI Fly app (under Device Management) and you can get a strong indication of the drone’s status before it ships.

Is there a free public database in Japan where I can check if a used DJI drone is stolen?

Japan does not maintain a single, public‑facing database of stolen drone serial numbers. The most practical routes are to provide the serial number to your local police station for a records check, and to use DJI’s own tools to see if the device has been flagged as lost or stolen within DJI’s system.

How do I verify the serial number on DJI FPV Goggles?

The serial number can be found in the goggles’ settings menu under “About,” or in the DJI Fly app when the goggles are connected. Ask the seller to record a power‑on clip showing that screen, then match it against the physical label and packaging.

What documents do Japanese Customs typically expect when I import a used DJI drone from China?

While requirements can change, many buyers find that a commercial invoice listing the drone’s serial number, model, purchase price, and country of origin helps the package clear smoothly. We recommend contacting Japan Customs directly for the latest import conditions.

Does Reboot Hub’s power‑on video show the serial number, and will it work for JCAB registration?

Yes. Our multi‑point bench test captures the serial number in‑app as part of the quality process. Each unit comes with a serial‑specific grading sheet, which you can use as supporting documentation for JCAB/MLIT registration.

What should I do if the serial number in the power‑on video doesn’t match the sticker on the drone?

This is a serious inconsistency. It may indicate a replaced shell, a donor chassis, or tampering. We strongly recommend not finalizing the purchase unless the seller provides a clear, verifiable reason and the serial in the app matches the documentation you’ll need for registration.


Bringing It All Together

Verifying a DJI serial number through a power‑on video is more than a box‑ticking exercise — it’s the checkpoint that connects your drone’s physical identity to Japan’s registration system, DJI’s device‑management network, and your own peace of mind. Whether you do every check yourself or lean on a supplier that has already integrated serial verification into a broader quality process, the principles stay the same: look at the number in the software, match it to the hardware, and check it against available records.

For Japan‑based buyers, that last step is especially relevant. A drone with a verified serial number isn’t just easier to register — it’s more likely to arrive without customs surprises and remain serviceable through its full usable life.

Ready to bring in a drone where the serial‑number checking is already done? Browse our current inventory of Pristine Pre‑Owned and Flawless units, each backed by a 180‑day warranty and complete pre‑shipment documentation. You can compare DJI models side‑by‑side to find the right fit, or dig deeper into exactly what our grading standard covers. Wherever you source your next drone, walk in with the serial number in hand — and in frame.

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