Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

What to Do When a DJI Drone from China Arrives Damaged

Updated June 12, 2026

Quick Answer

  • At delivery: examine the parcel for visible damage, note any dents or tears on the courier’s device, and take clear photos before opening. If the box looks crushed, you have the right to refuse delivery or sign “unchecked” / “received with reservation”.
  • Document everything: keep the outer packaging, photograph the drone’s condition with the serial number, and save all tracking, invoice, and customs documents.
  • Report promptly: notify the seller and the courier within their deadline (usually 24–48 hours for transport damage). Use the platform’s dispute system if you bought via AliExpress.
  • Returns & refunds: returning a damaged unit to China from Poland is possible; import VAT and duty may be recoverable through Polish customs if you re-export the goods — but check with a customs agent.
  • Mitigate risk upfront: ask for full-value insurance and DDP shipping that genuinely pre-pays customs charges. At Reboot Hub, every pre-owned DJI drone passes a multi‑point bench test and is graded “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” before it leaves our Shenzhen facility, lowering the chance you’ll need to unpack a surprise.

Buying a pre‑owned or refurbished DJI drone from China can unlock outstanding value, especially when you rely on a supplier with deep supply‑chain roots in Shenzhen and Hong Kong. But a damaged delivery can turn excitement into a cross‑border headache. If you’re in Poland and your DJI drone just arrived dented, unresponsive, or with a cracked gimbal, this practical guide walks you through the return and refund process — and what you can do before and after the courier rings your doorbell.

All recommendations here reflect the experience of an operational peer who deals with international shipments daily. They are not legal advice, and because rules evolve, check the latest customs and aviation requirements directly with Poland’s national authorities and the European Union’s EASA framework. For drone registration in Poland, refer to the national CAA drone registration system.


Importing a DJI Drone from China to Poland: DDP, Customs, and the VAT Reality

When a Chinese seller offers DDP (Delivered Duty Paid), the promise is that customs duties, import VAT, and clearance fees are covered upfront. In many cases, that works smoothly — the courier delivers your drone without asking for a single złoty. But misunderstandings are common.

Does DDP really mean no extra cost in Poland?

  • What DDP should cover: under Incoterms 2020, DDP obligates the seller to clear the goods for import and pay all duties and taxes. You receive the drone at your door.
  • Where surprises appear: if the seller under‑declares the value or misclassifies the product, Polish customs may re‑assess the shipment and, occasionally, the courier contacts you for an additional payment — even on a DDP shipment. The seller may also use a shipping method where the last‑mile carrier handles the import, and the prepayment doesn’t fully reach the customs authority.
  • Used and refurbished goods: customs valuation for pre‑owned drones isn’t always straightforward. Polish customs typically look at the transaction value, but they can apply a different value if they suspect under‑valuation. Check with the Krajowa Administracja Skarbowa or a licensed customs broker if you need clarity on how a “Pristine Pre‑Owned” unit is treated.

Bottom line: DDP and fully insured shipping reduce risk, but they aren’t an immunity shield. Always keep the commercial invoice, the proof of DDP, and the customs declaration supplied by the courier.

VAT and duty on repaired gimbals or warranty shipments

If you’re sending a failed gimbal back to China for chip‑level repair and the seller returns the same unit, the Polish customs treatment could be considered a “return after repair.” In principle, VAT and duty shouldn’t be applied twice on the same item under outward processing relief, but the paperwork must be flawless. Talk to your courier or customs agent about the correct temporary export procedure to avoid paying VAT again when the repaired part re‑enters Poland.


Receiving the Shipment in Poland: Before You Sign

Courier liability and the first few seconds

In Poland, carriers typically allow you to inspect the external condition of a parcel before signing. If the box shows crushing, water damage, or tape that appears tampered with:

  1. Do not sign as “received in good condition.” Instead, note the damage on the delivery device with a phrase like “damaged box” or “accepted with reservation.”
  2. If the damage is severe, you can refuse delivery altogether — as long as the goods haven’t been unpacked and the courier agrees to take the parcel back. Refusal often triggers the return‑to‑sender process, which strengthens your damage claim.
  3. Photograph the package from multiple angles, with the tracking label clearly visible. Then open it and photograph the drone’s condition, paying special attention to the gimbal, arms, and battery compartment. Capture the serial number alongside the damage.

When the drone looks fine outside but is broken inside

If the external carton is pristine but the drone has internal damage (a cracked mainboard, a gimbal that won’t calibrate, or an error code), the carrier may initially push back. That’s why immediate testing is crucial. Within the platform’s buyer‑protection window (often 15 days after delivery on AliExpress), you need evidence that the damage was present upon arrival, not from a later crash. A video recording of you unboxing and powering the drone for the first time is a strong informal record.


Documenting Damage and Filing a Complaint in Poland

A structured complaint sets the right tone and protects your rights in Polish law and within the terms of EU consumer protection, even when the seller is outside the EU.

Step‑by‑step for damaged delivery

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Step Action Why it matters
1. Time‑stamp Note the exact date and time of delivery. Polish couriers often require damage reports within 24–48 hours.
2. Visual proof Take photos of the external box, the internal packing, and the drone’s damage (including serial number). Establishes the chain of custody and shows the condition as delivered.
3. Written damage report Write a concise description: “Gimbal unresponsive, arm hinge cracked, error code 30085.” Attach the photo set. A factual report is harder to dismiss than a generic complaint.
4. Contact the courier first File a claim using the courier’s online form. Ask for a written acknowledgment. Courier liability for international DAP/DDP shipments is often governed by the CMR Convention or the carrier’s terms.
5. Notify the seller Send the report and photos immediately. If bought on AliExpress, open a dispute under “Item damaged in transit.” Seller cooperation often speeds up reshipment or refund.
6. Escalate to the platform If the seller is unresponsive within the platform’s time limit, escalate to the marketplace’s resolution team. AliExpress Buyer Protection can force a full refund if evidence is solid.

If you bought directly from a specialist refurbisher — such as a store that provides a grading standard and warranty — the seller will often handle the courier claim for you. That can save you navigating Polish carrier processes in a foreign language. At Reboot Hub, for example, every unit shipped from our Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply chain carries a 180‑day warranty on refurbished drones, so a damage report leads to a direct replacement or repair discussion rather than a dead end.


Returning a Damaged Drone to China from Poland

When a return is unavoidable, you face two practical hurdles: shipping the item back and recovering the Polish import VAT and duty you already paid.

Shipping logistics

  • Cost and speed: return shipping from Poland to China via courier is costly, often exceeding 150–200 PLN for a standard drone package. Some sellers provide a pre‑paid return label; if not, negotiate a shipping allowance before sending anything.
  • Customs on return: clearly mark the package as “Returned goods — defective” and attach the original export documentation. Polish customs office may ask for proof of the original import declaration to allow the re‑export without additional export duties. If the return documentation isn’t properly prepared, the drone could be treated as a new export, creating confusion at the Chinese border and potentially delaying the refund.
  • VAT and duty recovery: Polish customs regulations provide mechanisms for reclaiming import VAT and duty when goods are returned intact or are proven defective. This usually requires you to file a request for correction or refund with the customs office that processed the original import, supported by the damage evidence, the return shipping documents, and confirmation that the seller has received the goods. Because the procedure depends on your specific customs declaration number, you’ll definitely want a customs agent’s help. Don’t expect an instant refund; the process can take weeks.

Will you get the full purchase price back?

Most platforms will refund the item price and, in many cases, the original shipping fee if the drone arrived damaged. Return shipping costs, however, are often borne by the buyer unless the seller agrees otherwise or platform policy steps in. Always check the dispute terms before you accept a seller’s promise to “send a new one.”


AliExpress Buyer Protection in Poland: What If the Drone Never Arrives?

Several of the real‑world concerns we hear — “DJI drone from AliExpress never arrived,” “Seller provided fake tracking” — are covered by AliExpress’s Buyer Protection for Polish addresses.

  • Delivery deadline: AliExpress typically commits to a delivery deadline; if the package doesn’t arrive by that date and the tracking shows no movement or a false delivery, you can open a dispute. The platform will refund you if the seller can’t prove delivery to your address.
  • Tracking and customs notification: Poland integrates well with global express networks, so legitimate shipments generate event‑by‑event tracking, including “customs clearance completed” status. If you receive a “customs notification” that asks for additional fees on a DDP shipment, pause. Contact the seller first through the platform’s messaging system. Do not pay extra until you confirm the seller hasn’t already pre‑paid those charges.
  • Dispute evidence: screenshots of tracking messages, any SMS or email from the carrier, and a screenshot of the communication with the seller all help. The platform’s decision usually favors the buyer when the seller fails to respond or to provide a valid proof of delivery.

Insurance: Protecting the Full Real Value

One of the hidden risks with DDP shipments from China is under‑insurance. Some sellers declare a value lower than what you paid to reduce their customs exposure, but that becomes your problem if the drone is lost or destroyed.

  • Ask for full‑value insurance before paying. A transparent seller will accommodate it, even if you need to cover the incremental insurance premium. Confirm the insured amount in writing.
  • Verify courier coverage: major integrators (DHL, UPS, FedEx) offer declared‑value coverage up to a limit, but they may exclude used electronic goods or limit liability based on weight. Understand those limits.

If you’d rather not do every check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard — our multi‑point bench test, cleaning, grading, and documentation are designed to lower the chance of receiving a drone that requires a return. Every unit is handled by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians who perform chip‑level repair where needed, and we use reinforced packaging that has evolved through thousands of European shipments.

Checklist: Damage‑handling snapshot
1. Inspect & document (photos + video)
2. Sign with reservation or refuse if crushed
3. Open dispute/courier claim within 24–48 hours
4. Preserve all packaging and labels
5. Confirm the seller’s return policy and platform deadline
6. If returning, consult a customs agent about VAT/duty recovery


Reducing Risk When Buying a Pre‑Owned DJI Drone

No pre‑purchase guarantee can eliminate transport damage, but you can tilt the odds in your favour. Working with a refurbisher that provides a transparent grading standard and a meaningful warranty turns a risky cross‑border transaction into a straightforward purchase.

At Reboot Hub, each drone receives a “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” grade after passing a multi‑point bench test. That means the drone isn’t merely visually wiped down; it undergoes functional checks that cover everything from gimbal calibration and ESC performance to battery health. Our technicians, certified to China’s MOHRSS Level‑3 standard, perform chip‑level repairs, so you’re not just hoping the unit was declared “tested” by a middleman. The 180‑day warranty on refurbished DJI drones adds a layer of post‑delivery confidence: if something is off upon arrival, you’ll be speaking with the people who built and tested that unit, not an anonymous marketplace seller.

When comparing models — say, a light Mavic 3 Classic versus a full‑featured Air 3S — the grading standard and the bench‑test rigour stay consistent. You can explore side‑by‑side specs and filter by condition in our comparison guide. (See how we grade every unit.)


FAQ

What does DDP mean when ordering a DJI drone from China, and will I have to pay customs fees in Poland?

DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) means the seller agrees to pay all import duties, VAT, and customs clearance fees. In theory, you shouldn’t pay anything at delivery. In practice, Polish customs may still contact you if the paperwork shows a low declared value or an incorrect tariff code. Keep the DDP invoice and check with the courier before paying any unexpected charges.

If my DJI drone arrives damaged, what immediate steps should I take in Poland?

First, inspect the outer box for signs of impact, moisture, or tampering. If damage is visible, note it on the courier’s electronic pad — write a short reservation such as “damaged box” — before you sign, or refuse delivery if the damage is extreme. Photograph everything. Then test the drone, ideally recording the unboxing. Notify the seller and open a claim with the courier within the carrier’s deadline, usually 24–48 hours.

How do I file a damage claim with the courier in Poland, and what are my buyer rights?

File through the courier’s online claim portal, attaching photos of the packaging and the damaged drone. Polityka reklamacyjna (complaint policy) of the carrier usually follows CMR Convention rules for international road transport. Polish consumer law supports your right to receive a product free of hidden defects, but since the seller is outside the EU, platform protection (AliExpress Buyer Protection or credit card chargeback) is your primary enforcement tool. Always involve the seller in parallel.

Can I return a damaged drone to China and recover the import VAT and customs duty I paid?

Yes, it is possible. Polish customs allows for the correction of customs declarations and refund of import VAT and duty when goods are re‑exported due to defects. You must file a request with the customs office that handled the original import, backed by proof of the damage, the return shipment documents, and evidence that the seller received the goods. The process is document‑intensive, so working with a customs broker is recommended.

Is it possible to insure a DDP shipment from China to Poland at the full real value?

Absolutely. Ask the seller to declare the true transaction value and purchase full‑value insurance. Many sellers default to lower declarations to save on customs exposure, but that limits your compensation if the parcel is lost or destroyed. Reputable refurbishers will agree to full‑value coverage; you may need to pay the insurance premium difference, which is typically modest.

I bought a DJI drone on AliExpress and it never arrived — what does AliExpress Buyer Protection cover in Poland?

AliExpress Buyer Protection guarantees a full refund if the item isn’t delivered by the promised delivery deadline and the seller can’t provide valid proof of delivery to your address. If you receive a false tracking update or a phantom “delivered” status, open a dispute right away. Screenshots of tracking history, messages with the seller, and any communication from Polish customs will support your claim.


Trust a Supply Chain Built on Bench‑Test Precision

A damaged delivery shouldn’t be the end of your drone journey — it’s a process, and when both the seller and the buyer know the steps, the outcome is often simpler than it first appears. By documenting early, communicating quickly, and understanding Poland’s customs refund pathways, you keep your options open whether you want a replacement, a repair, or a refund.

If you’d rather let the workshop handle the tough bits, explore how Reboot Hub prepares every pre‑owned DJI drone. Our Shenzhen‑ and Hong Kong‑based technicians put each unit through a multi‑point bench test, chip‑level repair, and a transparent grading system that produces “Pristine Pre‑Owned” and “Flawless” grades. The 180‑day warranty means you’re not left alone if something goes wrong during transit.

Browse our inventory of Pristine Pre‑Owned and Flawless DJI drones — every unit is protected by a 180‑day warranty and built for real‑world reliability, not just a good photo. When you’re ready to fly, you’ll be opening a box that’s already passed the checks that matter.

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

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