Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 09, 2026
Whether you are mapping a new subdivision outside São Paulo, conducting a volumetric survey on a construction site in Rio, or planning a cross‑border shoot that passes through Brazil, the process of importing a DJI drone from China can feel like a maze of regulators, carriers, and tax authorities. This guide walks you through the practical steps that matter most to surveyors, filmmakers, and other professional operators who need a reliable DJI platform — without getting caught flat‑footed by customs.
At Reboot Hub, every pre‑owned and refurbished DJI drone we ship from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain undergoes a multi‑point bench test by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians and is backed by a 180‑day warranty. That operational confidence flows into the paperwork too: a drone that arrives with clean documentation and a transparent grading record (Flawless or Pristine Pre‑Owned) gives you a head start with customs. If you’d rather not piece together every check yourself, the Reboot Hub standard is a practical starting point — more on that later.
Brazil’s customs authority (Receita Federal) taxes virtually all international shipments above the de minimis threshold. For a commercial drone sent from China, the import duty is calculated on the CIF value (Cost, Insurance, Freight) and typically includes:
Because rate tables change and depend on the precise NCM subheading, we can’t drop a single magic number here. A practical approach is to run a simulation through the Receita Federal’s “Simulador do Tratamento Tributário” or ask a licensed customs broker to pull the exact rates for the drone’s HS code (often around 8525.80.19 for unmanned aerial cameras, but verify locally).
Separate from customs, any drone operated professionally in Brazil must comply with ANAC’s RBAC‑E 94 and may require DECEA SARPAS authorization for flights in controlled airspace. These rules cover registration, pilot licensing, and operational limits — they don’t directly dictate import taxes, but customs may ask for evidence that the equipment is being brought in for a legitimate commercial purpose. Having your ANAC registration or a letter of intent from a survey project can help demonstrate compliance and keep the shipment moving.
Disclaimer: Tax and regulatory rules change. Always confirm the latest requirements with Receita Federal, ANAC, and DECEA before shipping.
There isn’t a universal “drone import calculator” that works for every country in the region, but you can build a reliable estimate with three inputs:
Many operators are tempted to under‑declare the value to “save” on taxes, but this carries a significant risk of customs audits, fines, and confiscation. A better way to manage cost is to ship a refurbished unit — because its declared value reflects a market‑adjusted price without sacrificing hardware integrity. Reboot Hub’s refurbished DJI drones come with a detailed grading report and a 180‑day warranty that justifies the declared value, which lowers the chance of valuation disputes.
| Cost Factor | What You Can Do |
|---|---|
| II / IPI / PIS / COFINS | Consult a broker or the Receita Federal simulator for current percentages. |
| ICMS | Plan for the destination state’s rate; it can add 7%–25% of the total federal base. |
| Brokerage & Storage | Budget for DHL or forwarder ancillary charges if the shipment is held. |
| Currency fluctuation | The US‑dollar/real exchange rate directly impacts CIF; forward‑plan purchases. |
If you are a wedding photographer, filmmaker, or survey crew flying into Brazil for a short‑term project, a Carnet ATA can help you temporarily import equipment without paying full import duties. The carnet serves as a passport for goods, allowing temporary admission for up to one year (renewable) as long as the items are re‑exported in the same condition.
This is particularly useful for:
What to keep in mind:
If a carnet isn’t practical, some professionals use a temporary import regime (Regime de Admissão Temporária) directly with Receita Federal, but the paperwork is heavier. Check with your customs broker which route suits your timeline and project length.
Choosing the right Incoterm is one of the most impactful decisions for a smooth import experience.
| Incoterm | What it means for your drone shipment |
|---|---|
| DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) | The seller pays all duties, taxes, and clearance fees upfront. You receive the drone with everything settled — no surprise COD charges. Strong indicator of a transparent supplier. |
| DDU / DAP (Delivered Duty Unpaid / At Place) | The carrier delivers to your door but stops at customs. You pay import duties, brokerage, and storage before release. Often leads to DHL payment‑on‑delivery requests and delays. |
Why DDP reduces risk for a busy surveyor: When you’re coordinating a construction project with a firm deadline, an unexpected DHL hold and a demand for several hundred reais in extra taxes can throw off your entire schedule. A pre‑owned drone shipped on DDP terms from a supplier that benchtests and grades every unit — like Reboot Hub — means you pay a single price and the hardware arrives ready to update firmware and fly. That’s worth considering when you compare the total landed cost versus the headache of navigating a customs desk you didn’t plan for.
Tracking your DJI from China, DHL delays, extra taxes & customs holds explained:
Even with DDP, Brazilian customs can flag a shipment for physical inspection. When that happens, DHL (or your courier) may request additional documents: commercial invoice in Portuguese, proof of ANAC registration, a detailed packing list, or radio‑frequency conformity information. Delays of 7–14 days are common. To lower the chance of a hold, ensure:
Many professionals import used DJI Phantom 4 Multispectral units or pre‑owned Matrice models because the capital outlay is lower and the equipment is already well‑characterised for survey work. Customs, however, treat used goods just like new ones — the duty calculation is still based on the CIF value, not an arbitrary “used” discount. What helps is a detailed condition report that supports the declared value.
At Reboot Hub, our refurbished drones go through chip‑level repair and a multi‑point bench test before receiving a Flawless or Pristine Pre‑Owned grade. That documentation, paired with a 180‑day warranty, gives customs a strong indicator of value and reduces the likelihood of them assigning their own (often higher) valuation. When importing into Colombia or Mexico, the same principle applies: a well‑documented, tested unit moves faster through aduanas.
While this guide dives deep on Brazil, many of the same concepts apply to neighboring countries — and our workshop regularly ships pre‑owned DJI drones to video professionals and topographers there too.
Unified lesson: Whether you’re shipping from China, Hong Kong, Poland, or France, the fundamental customs questions are identical — declaration accuracy, documentation integrity, and choosing the right Incoterm.
Every DJI drone we prepare for a surveyor, filmmaker, or photographer goes through a standard that matters at the border:
This is the foundation we load into the commercial documentation you receive — a record that helps your customs broker justify the declared value and avoids the valuation lottery. If you’re still deciding which DJI platform fits your project, our side‑by‑side comparison of the latest models can help you zero in on the right tool.
(See how our grading standard translates into real‑world reliability on /pages/the-reboot-hub-standard and /pages/drone-grading-standard.)
The exact amount depends on the NCM code, CIF value, and your state’s ICMS rate. A customs broker can run a precise simulation using Receita Federal’s tool. As a rough planning figure, expect federal taxes (II, IPI, PIS/COFINS) to be a significant percentage of the CIF value, plus ICMS that can vary from roughly 7% to 25%. Shipping a refurbished unit with clear commercial documentation helps keep the declared value realistic and defensible.
Yes, you can typically use a Carnet ATA or Brazil’s temporary admission regime to bring professional equipment in duty‑free, provided the drone is re‑exported within the allowed period (usually up to one year). You may need to lodge a security deposit equal to the potential duties. Keep in mind that ANAC’s operational rules under RBAC‑E 94 still apply, and you may need DECEA SARPAS clearance if you’ll be flying in controlled airspace.
Mexico’s SAT requires a commercial invoice, packing list, and often proof of NOM‑208 conformity for radio‑frequency equipment. For a used drone, a detailed condition report that states the hours of operation, sensor function, and cosmetic condition helps validate the declared value and speeds clearance. We recommend working with a customs agent who understands drone imports, especially if the unit was refurbished.
Under DDP (Delivered Duty Paid), the seller handles all duties, taxes, and clearance before you receive the shipment — you pay a single all‑in price. With DDU (or DAP), the carrier delivers the package to your door but you are responsible for paying import taxes and brokerage fees upon arrival. For a construction survey project with a tight timeline, DDP reduces the risk of a surprise DHL hold and extra charges, providing a stronger forecast of total landed cost.
DHL frequently holds packages for customs inspection in Brazil, especially if the documentation lacks the correct NCM code, a Portuguese‑language invoice, or if the declared value appears inconsistent. During the hold, you may be asked to pay storage fees, brokerage charges, and the duties themselves before the parcel is released. Keeping all paperwork consistent with the actual condition and value of the drone — particularly for used equipment — helps lower the chance of extended holds.
Yes. While registration with ANAC under RBAC‑E 94 is an operational requirement rather than a customs requirement, customs officials sometimes ask for proof of a legitimate commercial purpose. Having an ANAC registration certificate (or at least a clear project statement) can help demonstrate compliance and reduce friction during import clearance. Additionally, any flight in controlled airspace requires prior DECEA SARPAS authorization.
You don’t need to become a customs expert to get a bench‑tested, professionally graded DJI drone into Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, or beyond. At Reboot Hub, every pre‑owned drone leaves our Shenzhen/Hong Kong facility with the documentation and condition confidence you need to streamline clearance and get airborne faster.
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