Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

RBI Overseas Remittance Limit 2025

Updated June 12, 2026

Quick Answer

  • The RBI’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) governs outward payments; check with your bank for the latest annual limit and any per‑transaction ceilings.
  • Paying a refurbished drone seller in China typically involves a wire transfer, credit card, or PayPal—each carries different documentation and chargeback protections.
  • Importing a drone into India means following DGCA Drone Rules 2021 and registering on the Digital Sky platform.
  • Keep every invoice, payment confirmation, and seller conversation. They are your strongest support if a chargeback or refund is needed.
  • Reboot Hub ships preowned DJI drones from its China facility after a multi‑point bench test, with a 180‑day warranty on refurbished units—but the payment and customs process remains yours to manage.

If you’re buying a used or refurbished DJI drone directly from a Chinese seller, the appeal is clear: upfront savings on a machine that still performs. At Reboot Hub, drones sourced from the Shenzhen‑Hong Kong supply chain are torn down, repaired at chip‑level by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians, and graded under the “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” standard before they leave the bench. A 180‑day warranty adds a practical safety net. But before you click “buy,” you need to understand how India’s foreign exchange rules, bank chargeback procedures, and drone import requirements fit together. This guide walks through the payment and compliance terrain so you can make an informed move—without treating any figure as fixed law.


RBI liberalised remittance scheme (LRS) for an overseas drone purchase

The Reserve Bank of India’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme lets resident individuals send money abroad for a broad set of permissible transactions, including payment for goods imported for personal use. Three points matter most when you’re asking about “RBI overseas remittance limit 2025”:

  1. Annual ceiling – The LRS limit is revised periodically. To avoid quoting a number that might be outdated the moment you read this, we won’t pin a figure here. Instead: as of your transaction date, get the current annual limit directly from your bank’s treasury desk or the RBI’s latest master circular. If you plan multiple remittances in the same financial year, track the total outflow against that limit.
  2. Purpose code – When you remit for goods, the bank will require a purpose code that corresponds to “import of goods below the threshold” or a similar head. The precise code is assigned by the bank; your invoice from the Chinese seller will usually be enough to get the ball rolling.
  3. Documentation – Even for a relatively small drone purchase, the bank will want a commercial invoice, a copy of your passport, and possibly a declaration that the goods are for personal use and not for resale. Some branches may also ask for a provisional customs duty estimate; ask before you initiate the transfer.

Because rules differ from one bank to another, a practical approach is to walk into your branch or call your relationship manager and say: “I need to remit X USD to a China‑based seller for personal import of a drone under LRS. What documents do you need, and what’s the current annual limit?”


How to pay a Chinese DJI seller from India

Reboot Hub and other refurbished‑drone sellers in China typically accept a range of payment methods. Each has its own risk profile and interaction with RBI rules.

Bank wire transfer

  • What it is – A direct SWIFT transfer from your Indian bank account to the seller’s Chinese account.
  • RBI angle – This is a straightforward outward remittance; it counts against your LRS limit and requires the documentation mentioned above. Most banks will process it within a few business days, but you may face intermediary‑bank fees.
  • Protection – There is no built‑in buyer protection. If the drone doesn’t arrive, you rely on the seller’s willingness to refund or on a payment‑method‑specific remedy (which a wire transfer rarely provides). For this reason, some buyers prefer methods that allow chargebacks.

International credit card

  • What it is – Paying through the seller’s payment gateway (AliPay, Stripe, or a direct checkout) using a card with international transaction capability.
  • RBI angle – Smaller card transactions may not require a separate LRS declaration, but the outflow still reduces your LRS headroom. Check with your card‑issuing bank whether your card is classified under LRS or if there is a threshold below which reporting is automatically handled.
  • Chargeback advantage – The big draw: if your DJI drone isn’t delivered, you can file a chargeback with your bank citing “merchandise not received.” Indian banks that issue Visa, Mastercard, or Rupay cards on global networks must honour genuine chargeback requests within specified timeframes. Keep every piece of evidence—order confirmation, seller communication, tracking data (or lack thereof)—and be prepared to submit a written statement.

PayPal

  • What it is – Some Chinese sellers accept PayPal, which allows you to fund the payment from your Indian credit card or PayPal balance.
  • RBI angle – A payment that results in a foreign‑currency debit to your card is treated as an outward remittance; PayPal’s internal processing doesn’t exempt it from LRS tracking. Confirm with your bank how such transactions are reported.
  • Dispute resolution – PayPal’s Buyer Protection programme can be a strong tool if the drone doesn’t arrive or is significantly different from the listing. You can escalate a dispute to a claim within the programme’s timeframe (usually 180 days from the transaction). If the seller cannot prove delivery, PayPal often refunds the buyer. For a defective item that the seller refuses to accept back, a chargeback through your card issuer might still be an option if PayPal’s process doesn’t resolve it.

You’ll find that even if a payment method feels familiar, the RBI remittance layer is easy to overlook. Take half an hour to clarify the classification with your bank—doing so lowers the chance of an unexpected limit‑breach notification months later.


Documents required for foreign remittance on drones: what your bank will ask

When you walk into the bank (or upload documents online), here’s the bundle that typically helps:

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Document Why it’s asked for Notes
Proforma / commercial invoice Shows the seller’s name, country, item description, amount, and currency. Must clearly state that the item is a drone; avoid vague descriptions.
Payment requisition form (A1/A2) Required by RBI for outward remittances. Your bank will provide the applicable form; fill in the purpose code they advise.
Copy of PAN card / passport Know‑your‑customer and LRS eligibility check. Some smaller-value remittances may not need a full passport copy; check.
Declaration of personal use Assures the bank the import isn’t for commercial resale. A simple signed letter often suffices.
Shipping / customs projection (optional) Helps the bank tag the transaction correctly if customs duties will be paid later. Not mandatory but may smooth multi‑step clearance.

If you’d rather not do every check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard for how we test and grade every drone before it leaves China—so at least the hardware side is already verified.


India 2025 bank process: chargeback for a DJI drone not delivered from China

A drone that never shows up is frustrating, but the chargeback mechanism is built for exactly this scenario—if you paid by credit card. Indian banks follow card‑network rules (Visa, Mastercard, RuPay) that define valid chargeback reason codes. A typical path:

  1. Gather evidence – Order confirmation, tracking link, any email or chat where the seller admits non‑delivery, and a timeline of your attempts to resolve the issue directly.
  2. Contact your card‑issuing bank – Call the number on the back of your card and request a “dispute for merchandise not received.” The bank will either take the complaint over the phone or ask you to fill a dispute form.
  3. Strict deadline – Card networks allow disputes within a certain window from the transaction date or expected delivery date. Waiting too long can forfeit the right. Ask the bank for the exact deadline; it is often between 45 and 120 days.
  4. Temporary credit – While the dispute is investigated, the bank may give you a provisional credit. If the seller cannot provide proof of delivery, the credit becomes permanent.
  5. Documented verification – The card network’s investigation is seen as a strong indicator of whether the transaction stands. It does not replace legal recourse, but it is a practical remedy that many buyers use successfully.

For payments made via PayPal, file a dispute inside PayPal’s resolution centre first; if that doesn’t work, your card issuer can still be a fallback as long as the chargeback window remains open.


RBI LRS limit and refund for a defective drone from China via PayPal

What if the drone arrives but has a fault that wasn’t disclosed? If you paid through PayPal and the item is “significantly not as described,” you can open a dispute and, if needed, escalate to a claim. PayPal often requires you to return the item at your own cost before issuing a refund, though some sellers—like Reboot Hub, which stands behind its bench‑tested units with a 180‑day warranty—may work with you on a return shipping label or a partial refund.

When the refund hits, money flows back into India. Inward remittance of a cancelled‑import refund is generally permitted by the RBI under the same LRS framework. To avoid delays:

  • Inform your bank that you are expecting a “refund against an earlier import payment.”
  • Provide the original SWIFT reference or card transaction record, plus the seller’s credit note or refund confirmation.
  • The bank will credit the foreign‑currency amount to your account; the exchange rate applied will be the prevailing one on the day of credit.

Because refund rules can involve specific purpose codes and timelines, we recommend checking with your bank as soon as you know the refund is coming. This reduces the chance of the funds being held up or misclassified.


DGCA drone rules and importing your DJI unit into India

Even after you successfully pay and the drone ships, there is a regulatory step that has nothing to do with RBI: clearing the drone through customs and registering it under India’s drone framework.

  • DGCA Drone Rules 2021 classify virtually all remotely piloted aircraft. A DJI drone bought from abroad must comply with the rules that apply to its weight class and intended use.
  • Unique Identification Number (UIN) – The Drone Rules require drones above a certain nano‑threshold to be registered. Once the unit lands in India, you’ll need to register it on the Digital Sky platform. The platform will guide you through the process, which includes uploading proof of ownership, drone specifications, and paying a fee.
  • Customs clearance – Drones attract customs duty. You’ll need the invoice, airway bill, and potentially a Bill of Entry if the consignment is shipped by courier or air cargo. The customs officer may ask for an import licence or a no‑objection certificate; check the latest DGFT notification before you place the order. Because policy can shift, contact the DGCA or a licensed customs broker to confirm the month‑specific requirements.

For a buyer who isn’t familiar with the Digital Sky workflow, a practical sequence is: obtain invoice → pay → air shipment → customs clearance → obtain UIN via Digital Sky → keep the drone in “no permission, no take‑off” mode until registration is complete / required permissions are sought. That sequence helps you stay compliant without assuming any step is optional.


DJI drone comparison table

Choosing the right model shapes your entire payment, customs, and registration route. Here’s a side‑by‑side look at the DJI drones Reboot Hub frequently stocks, all graded and bench‑tested.

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Model Camera Max Flight Time (approx.) Weight (approx.) Typical Use Available Grades at Reboot Hub
DJI Mini 4 Pro 4K/60fps; vertical shooting 34 min < 249 g Sub‑250 g travel drone, minimal regulatory friction in many regions Flawless, Pristine Pre‑Owned
DJI Air 3 Dual‑camera 4K; wide & medium tele 46 min 720 g Advanced consumer photography, longer flights Flawless, Pristine Pre‑Owned
DJI Mavic 3 Classic Hasselblad 4/3 CMOS 5.1K 46 min 895 g High‑end aerial imaging, commercial‑adjacent work Pristine Pre‑Owned
DJI Avata 4K ultra‑wide; built‑in prop guards 18 min 410 g FPV immersion, tight‑space shooting Pristine Pre‑Owned
DJI Mini 2 SE 2.7K; gimbal stabilised 31 min < 249 g Affordable starter drone, weekend content Flawless

All units undergo the same multi‑point bench test and are covered by Reboot Hub’s 180‑day warranty on refurbished gear. Dive deeper on the drone comparison page to match specs with your budget.


FAQ

What is the RBI LRS limit for buying a DJI drone from China in 2025?

The Reserve Bank of India sets an annual ceiling under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme for resident individuals. The exact figure is subject to change. For the day you initiate a wire transfer or card payment, contact your bank or check the RBI’s latest master direction. All outward payments for personal imports count toward this limit, so tracking your total remittances in the same financial year is wise.

What documents do I need to provide my bank for a foreign remittance to a Chinese drone seller?

Typically you’ll need the seller’s invoice, a completed remittance requisition form (your bank will supply the correct version), a PAN card or passport copy, and a simple declaration confirming the drone is for personal use. The bank will assign the suitable purpose code for “import of goods.” Always confirm the exact list with your branch before initiating the SWIFT transfer.

How do I file a chargeback with my Indian bank if my DJI drone from China is not delivered?

Act quickly: collect your order confirmation, tracking details, and any correspondence with the seller, then approach your card‑issuing bank and raise a dispute for “merchandise not received.” The bank follows card‑network timelines—often 45 to 120 days from the transaction date. If the seller cannot produce valid proof of delivery, the temporary credit may become permanent. A documented verification trail greatly supports your case.

Can I get a refund through PayPal if the drone arrives defective, and how does the RBI treat that refund?

Yes. PayPal’s Buyer Protection covers items that are significantly not as described. Open a dispute in PayPal’s resolution centre, and if the seller doesn’t resolve it, escalate to a claim. Once a refund is issued, the funds are received as an inward remittance for cancelled import. Inform your bank with the original payment reference and the seller’s credit note to ensure smooth credit into your account.

Are there any per‑transaction limits under LRS for buying a used drone?

The LRS framework does not generally impose a separate per‑transaction limit on purchases of goods for personal use, but the remittance must remain within the overall annual ceiling. Banks may ask additional questions for larger single payments; for a typical refurbished drone, the primary filter is the annual LRS limit, not a per‑purchase cap. Verify this with your bank, as internal policies can vary.

Do I need to register the imported drone with DGCA, and what is the process?

Under the Drone Rules 2021, most drones that weigh above the nano‑category threshold require a Unique Identification Number (UIN). After clearing customs, register the drone on the DGCA’s Digital Sky platform by submitting proof of ownership, technical specifications, and the prescribed fee. Check the latest DGFT import policy as well, because an import licence or NOC may be required before the drone reaches Indian airspace. Regulations are updated periodically, so confirm with the DGCA or a licensed customs broker before you order.


Closing: a tested drone, a structured payment, and a clear path through compliance

Buying a pre‑owned DJI drone from China doesn’t need to feel like a leap in the dark. On the hardware side, Reboot Hub’s multi‑point bench test, transparent grading—Pristine Pre‑Owned and Flawless—and a 180‑day warranty reduce the risk of surprises. On the payment and import side, the steps are learnable: understand your LRS headroom, choose a payment method that gives you a chargeback path, keep every document, and work through the DGCA registration once the drone lands.

Take a few minutes to browse our current inventory and compare models with the drone grading standard in mind. If you find a unit that fits your mission, the checkout will guide you—and your bank will handle the RBI piece when you give them the right paperwork.

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

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