Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 08, 2026
Buying a DJI drone from China can be tempting. Prices on platforms like AliExpress, Taobao, or even on European marketplaces such as Allegro often sit well below the official recommended retail price in Europe. And when a seller in Shenzhen or Hong Kong promises the box is sealed, the drone is “global version,” or that DJI Care Refresh is included, it’s easy to assume you’ve found a genuine bargain. But for an operator in Spain, France, Germany, Poland, Sweden, or the Netherlands, the question that matters most is: will that Care Refresh actually work when you need it?
At Reboot Hub we handle thousands of pre‑owned and refurbished DJI drones every year. Our technicians in Shenzhen and Hong Kong have seen every combination of market‑specific hardware, firmware region, and warranty limitation. We also know how crucial it is for European flyers to understand what they’re really buying. This guide walks through the practical reality of DJI Care Refresh for drones imported from China into the EU, with a focus on Spain but covering the key points for every major European market.
DJI Care Refresh is not a single global product. DJI operates distinct service regions, and the Care Refresh plan you purchase is tied to both the device’s serial‑number region and the sales region of the plan. In simple terms:
This has nothing to do with whether the drone is “unused” or “sealed.” Even a factory‑fresh unit bought from a Chinese seller comes with the region‑lock baked into its hardware identity. The same applies to units sold as “international version” — unless the seller can provide proof that the device was originally allocated to the EU distribution channel and that the Care Refresh was purchased in the EU, the safest assumption is that Care Refresh will not be honoured in Europe.
There is a common workaround: if you have a relationship with a repair centre or you are willing to send the drone back to China for service, the China‑specific Care Refresh may still apply. But for the average hobbyist or commercial operator in Madrid or Lyon, that’s neither practical nor cost‑effective.
When you buy a pre‑owned DJI drone that originally came from China, the situation becomes even more nuanced. A Care Refresh plan, if still active, may have been purchased by the original owner in China, leaving you with a region‑locked policy you cannot transfer to the EU. In many cases, the plan has already expired by the time the drone is resold, or it has only a few months left, making it of little real value.
Some European resellers claim the used drone “includes DJI Care Refresh.” Unless you can log into your own DJI account, bind the drone, and see the Care Refresh status with an EU flag, you should treat that promise as unverified. DJI itself does not normally transfer Care Refresh between regions, nor does it allow an active Chinese plan to be “converted” into a European one.
At Reboot Hub, we specialise in pre‑owned and refurbished DJI drones that are ready to work in the region where the user will actually fly. Every unit we sell is graded under our multi‑point bench test process, and we clearly state what warranty coverage is included from us — rather that relying on a DJI Care Refresh plan that may or may not follow the hardware across borders. Our 180‑day warranty on refurbished units is designed to give you a practical safety net without the guesswork of import‑region limitations.
If you’d rather not spend hours decoding serial numbers and region policies, take a look at how Reboot Hub tests, grades, and warrants every drone: The Reboot Hub Standard.
Even if you somehow managed to get a China‑region Care Refresh plan honoured in Europe, the drone itself must meet EU product regulations. Under the EASA Open category framework, most consumer drones flown in the EU must carry the CE marking and, for newer models, an EASA class identification label (C0, C1, C2, C3, or C4). Drones manufactured solely for the Chinese market often lack this labelling, which may make them technically non‑compliant for use in Spain, France, Germany, and other EASA member states.
This compliance slip doesn’t just create a theoretical problem. In the event of an incident, your insurance might be void if the aircraft was a non‑CE market import. Authorities may also treat the drone as an “uncertified” product, which could result in operational restrictions or fines, depending on local enforcement.
In practice, many recreational pilots fly China‑imported drones without immediate consequences. But we strongly recommend checking with your national civil aviation authority — for example, AESA in Spain, the DGAC in France, or the Luftfahrt‑Bundesamt in Germany — before relying on a drone that doesn’t carry the required EU markings. Compliance and Care Refresh validity are two separate boxes you need to tick, and neither forgives the other.
A note on regulations: the rules around drone imports, radio emissions, and product certification change frequently. This article reflects the general landscape as of early 2025 but should not be taken as legal guidance. Always verify with the relevant national aviation authority.
Use the table below for any drone purchase that crosses a regional boundary — especially when a seller promises global Care Refresh or “full warranty” on a unit shipped from China.
| What to check | Why it matters | How to verify |
|---|---|---|
| Device serial‑number region | Determines whether EU service centres will handle repairs under any DJI plan | Ask the seller for the full serial number; run it through DJI’s online warranty check (if available) or contact DJI support |
| DJI Care Refresh plan region | Even if the drone is global, a China‑purchased plan won’t transfer | Log into the DJI account that holds the plan and look for the region identifier, or request a screenshot from the seller |
| CE / EASA class marking | Required for legal flight in the EU and often for insurance | Inspect the product label on the drone body or battery compartment; check the packaging for the CE mark and class label |
| Proof of original purchase channel | Helps confirm whether the drone was meant for the EU market | Receipt or invoice showing the seller’s location and the drone’s SKU; EU‑market SKUs often end with specific suffixes |
| Local CAA registration requirement | Even a compliant drone may need to be registered with the national authority | Visit the website of the relevant national aviation authority (AESA, DGAC, CAA, etc.) and confirm operator ID rules |
If you cannot obtain solid answers for at least the first three items, we recommend considering a drone sourced within the EU or from a refurbisher who stands behind the product with their own warranty and has already verified the hardware for your region.
Reboot Hub operates out of the Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply chain, which gives us direct access to a large pool of pre‑owned DJI drones. But we don’t simply box‑shift them to European customers. Every unit goes through a detailed bench test performed by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians — a Chinese certification that requires proven chip‑level repair skills — and we grade every drone into our “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” categories.
Crucially, we make no claim that a DJI Care Refresh plan acquired in China will work in Barcelona or Berlin. Instead, we offer our own 180‑day warranty on refurbished units, and we encourage customers to look at regional DJI Care Refresh options if they are available for the unit’s serial‑number region. For many popular models, you can still purchase a DJI Care Refresh plan in Europe after the drone is activated, as long as the device passes DJI’s video verification process and is in a supported region. By sourcing units that already carry an EU‑compatible serial region, we aim to keep that door open — but ultimately DJI’s own terms apply.
Mid‑article contextual CTA: If you want a drone that’s already been checked for hardware integrity and has a transparent warranty, explore the Reboot Hub difference on our Drone Grading Standard page.
It depends entirely on the region of the Care Refresh plan. A new drone bought from a Chinese seller and offered on Allegro may be sealed, but if the Care Refresh was purchased and activated in China, it will not be valid in Poland — or anywhere else in the EU. The “unused” status of the drone does not bypass the regional restriction. You would need to purchase a new Care Refresh plan within the EU once the drone is activated, and even that is only possible if the serial‑number region allows it. Always confirm with DJI Poland before relying on any promise of coverage.
Hong Kong‑sourced drones often fall into the same category as mainland China units when it comes to DJI Care Refresh. Many are sold with an Asia‑Pacific region plan that does not extend to Europe. You might be able to use a “global” Care Refresh if it was bought in Hong Kong and the seller can demonstrate that the plan’s region matches the EU service centres. However, the majority of Hong Kong grey‑market units come with a Hong Kong or China plan, leaving Spanish operators without local service. We recommend contacting DJI Support Spain with the serial number before purchase.
Probably not. A second‑hand drone imported from Shenzhen almost certainly has a China‑region Care Refresh plan, which DJI Germany will not accept. The fact that a Care Refresh plan appears active in your DJI account does not mean it’s eligible for service in a different region. If the drone has an EU serial‑number region and you are simply taking over the remainder of a German Care Refresh plan, it might be fine — but that would be the exception, not the rule. Check with DJI Germany and, if possible, transfer the drone to your account to see the service region status.
The situation is unchanged: DJI Care Refresh for a drone imported from China will be valid in France only if the drone and the plan are both registered to the EU/EEA region. As drone‑regulation enforcement in France has been tightening under the EASA framework, having a non‑CE marked drone also puts you at additional risk. Many forum posts (e.g., “Avis sur DJI Care Refresh acheté en Chine”) reflect the same conclusion — it rarely works for European repairs.
Swedish and Dutch service centres follow the same DJI region‑locking policy: a China‑purchased Care Refresh generally isn’t accepted. The query “Gäller DJI Care Refresh i Sverige för en drönare köpt i Kina?” (“Is DJI Care Refresh valid in Sweden for a drone purchased in China?”) gets a short answer: no, unless the drone was originally destined for the Nordic region and the Care Refresh was bought there. Before flying, also confirm that the drone complies with Transportstyrelsen’s (Sweden) or ILenT’s (Netherlands) registration and operational rules, which may be stricter for non‑CE imports.
We focus on pre‑owned and refurbished DJI drones, and our primary value is the Reboot Hub 180‑day warranty — not a questionable transfer of a China‑region Care Refresh. Some of our inventory includes drones originally intended for the EU market, and for those units you may be able to purchase a new DJI Care Refresh plan in your home country after activation. We encourage you to browse our current inventory to find models that best match your regional needs and budget.
Closing CTA — ready to fly with confidence?
A drone bought from China can look like a great deal on paper, but when you factor in the Care Refresh uncertainty, the compliance gaps, and the risk of being without a working aircraft, the true cost often rises. At Reboot Hub we believe the smarter path is a refurbished unit that’s been bench‑tested by certified technicians, graded transparently, and backed by a warranty you can actually use in Europe.
Browse our drone inventory to see current models, compare specifications, and find a drone that suits your mission — without the region‑lock headaches.
Skip the gamble — every Reboot Hub drone is graded, bench-tested & warrantied.
Browse verified drones