Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
Buying a DJI Agras agricultural drone from China can unlock serious savings, but it also opens a door to counterfeit units, hidden regional locks, and warranty gaps that many Peruvian operators only discover after the package arrives. At Reboot Hub, we source, grade, and bench-test pre-owned and refurbished DJI drones through our Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply chain, putting every unit through a multi-point bench test and assigning it a transparent grade — so you get clearer expectations before money changes hands. This guide walks through the authentication app, regional pitfalls, customs steps, and practical checks that every buyer in Peru, Colombia, or Brazil should run before committing.
The DJI authentication app (often accessed via DJI Fly or the standalone DJI Auth App) links a drone’s unique serial number to DJI’s activation database. When you scan or enter the serial number, the app can show:
For a buyer considering a Chinese-market Agras shipped to Peru, this scan is the first documented verification that the machine exists in DJI’s system as a legitimate product. However, a passing result does not mean the drone carries a warranty valid in Peru, nor does it confirm that the firmware will play well with local agricultural mapping bases. Regional warranty limitations and activation policies mean a drone originally sold in mainland China will often show “no warranty coverage” when accessed from a Peruvian DJI account. That’s not a sign it’s fake — it’s a sign of DJI’s region-locked service structure.
Practical steps to authenticate a drone you haven’t paid for yet:
The Peruvian market has seen a spike in “new” DJI Agras T30 and T40 listings on Mercado Libre and social media groups that are actually refurbished Chinese units with replaced shells — or outright clones that cannot connect to the DJI ecosystem. Some sellers pose as official distributors but operate with no after-sales infrastructure, leaving you with a machine that acts like a brick the moment it needs a firmware update or a regional unlock.
Spotting these units before money changes hands requires checking both the app and the physical tells. The table below maps the most reliable indicators.
| Indicator | Genuine DJI Agras (New / Factory Refurbished) | Suspicious Unit / Likely Fake or Misrepresented |
|---|---|---|
| Authentication app result | Recognizes serial, shows plausible activation date | Serial not recognized, or app shows “activated” on a date far earlier than the seller claims |
| Warranty status in app | Clearly states a limited warranty (may be region-specific) | Shows no warranty at all, or warranty expired years ago for a “new” unit |
| Shell finish & seams | Smooth, even matte finish; tight uniform gaps around tank and arms | Rough edges, uneven texture, spray-painted feel, or noticeable glue residue on seams |
| Spray pump & nozzle labels | DJI-branded or licensed imagery, high-contrast printing | Blurred, off-center labels or no DJI markings; generic Chinese manufacturer branding |
| Flight controller firmware | Loads current DJI Agras firmware and accepts regional RTK corrections | Cannot update beyond a locked Chinese version, or fails to read local RTK networks |
| Ports & connectors | Weather-sealed aviation connectors, uniform color | Exposed pins, mismatched colors, cheap plastic feel |
If you’d rather not do every check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard — every drone we sell is graded, run through a multi-point bench test, and backed by a 180-day warranty, so you’re not left guessing what’s inside the box.
Chinese-market DJI Agras drones often ship with a firmware variant that restricts certain radio bands or disables features enabled by regional certification. In Peru, an operator may find that the drone refuses to accept a local RTK base station, restricts spray rate metrics to Chinese-language interfaces, or blocks map caching unless a regional unlock is performed — which DJI does not guarantee for machines transferred between regions.
Some resellers in China offer “international firmware” flashes before shipment. Those flashes can lower the chance of a lockout, but they also introduce a risk: a drone with modified firmware may fail the authentication app check or be flagged in DJI’s system as tampered. Moreover, a machine that runs a cross-flashed firmware might still not fully comply with Peru’s DGAC requirements for UAV operations, which typically demand that agricultural spraying drones pass specific equipment registration steps.
For Brazilian operators, ANAC’s RBAC-E 94 and the DECEA SARPAS authorization process set out specific requirements for RPAS used in agricultural applications. While Peru follows its own DGAC rules, the Brazilian model gives you a sense of what a well-regulated market demands: aircraft registration, pilot licensing, and operational authorization for commercial spraying. If you are buying a Chinese Agras to operate in Peru, assume that you will need to validate both the firmware compliance and the operational filings with DGAC. Always check with DGAC or a local aviation lawyer before importing a drone specifically for agricultural contracting.
DJI’s warranty is region-locked. A drone purchased and activated in Mainland China typically carries a warranty that is enforceable only through DJI’s service centers in that region. When the same unit is brought to Peru, the serial number may appear in DJI’s system but with a flag that says “out of region” or “no warranty available.” For many Polish, Colombian, or Peruvian buyers who thought they were getting a fully covered machine, this comes as an unpleasant shock — especially when the purchase price was advertised against an official Latin American distributor’s warranty.
Refurbished units add another layer. A Chinese refurbished Agras drone sold as “like new” on AliExpress or Mercado Libre may have no remaining DJI warranty at all, or it may carry a short vendor-provided warranty that offers no path to genuine DJI parts if something fails during a spraying season. The authentication app will often confirm that the original warranty has expired or was never activated for an international account.
Reboot Hub takes a different approach. Our refurbished DJI drones undergo chip-level repair by MOHRSS Level-3 certified technicians in Shenzhen and are assigned a clear “Pristine Pre-Owned” or “Flawless” grade. The 180-day warranty we provide is backed directly by our supply chain, which means you’re not relying on a distant DJI service center that may refuse a cross-region claim.
Authentication is an equipment-verification step; it does not substitute for the Peruvian customs declaration process. When a DJI Agras drone arrives from China, SUNAT requires:
Because agricultural drones contain lithium batteries and spray system components, additional permissions from Peru’s environmental or chemical safety agencies may apply if the unit is imported ready to spray. Fines for misdeclaration can be substantial. To lower your risk, confirm the HS code and any applicable duties with your customs broker before the shipment leaves China. Real-world anecdotes from Lima-based importers suggest that drones valued above certain thresholds incur both IGV and ad valorem duties; however the exact rates fluctuate with bilateral trade policies. Reboot Hub does not provide customs advice, but we recommend you talk to a Peruvian customs specialist and obtain written confirmation of the total landed cost so you aren’t surprised when SUNAT reviews your airway bill.
On the aviation-regulatory side, Peru’s DGAC generally requires agricultural drone operators to register aircraft and obtain an operational permit for commercial spraying. This is a parallel track to the SUNAT import clearance; authentication in the DJI app has no bearing on whether DGAC will approve your specific hardware setup.
This scenario is common enough that operators in Lima, Medellín, and São Paulo have nicknamed it the “China brick” moment. If the app throws an error after you’ve received the drone, work through this practical sequence before assuming the unit is fake:
For Brazilian or Colombian operators, the same steps apply, though you may also need to check whether the drone’s radio module aligns with ANATEL or CRC certifications. The auth app won’t tell you that; it’s a separate compliance vector.
A common fear is that a drone bought in China will be “locked” to Mandarin menus and refuse to work with Spanish or Portuguese language settings. In most cases, DJI Agras models allow language switching within the controller app, and the authentication app itself can be set to Spanish. However, some Chinese-region Agras units restrict the mapping layer to a China-specific map provider (Amap), which will not load detailed agricultural field maps in Peru. You may be able to cache offline maps from a third party, but this adds friction. Reboot Hub technicians perform a region-compatibility pre-check on every drone we sell, which includes verifying that maps, language packs, and the RTK coordinate system can be set for the buyer’s intended operating country.
Yes, the DJI authentication app can often read the serial number of an AliExpress-sold drone, provided the drone is a genuine DJI product. However, the app’s warranty and activation screen will almost always reflect the China-region activation policy. Many such drones show “no warranty” or an expired warranty when queried from a Peruvian DJI account. A successful authentication scan is not a sign of a valid local warranty; it just confirms DJI’s internal record.
DJI warranties are region-specific. A drone sold and activated in mainland China is covered only through DJI’s Chinese service network. Peruvian service centers cannot process warranty claims for out-of-region serial numbers. Refurbished Chinese units sold as “new” often have no DJI warranty remaining at all, and the reseller warranty may be hard to enforce across borders. Look for a supplier that offers its own documented warranty, such as Reboot Hub’s 180-day coverage, rather than relying on a DJI promise that likely won’t apply.
Rely on three layers: the authentication app scan, a physical comparison (using the table in this article), and seller behavior. A seller who refuses to provide a serial number before payment, shows only stock photos, or claims the drone is “new” but offers a price far below the official Latin America distributor’s price is a high-risk scenario. When possible, ask for a short video call showing the drone powered on with the serial number visible and the app screen live.
First, disconnect any VPN and try on a stable mobile connection. Verify the serial number character by character. If the drone was previously bound to another DJI account, ask the seller to unbind it. If the serial is still not found, create a new DJI account with a mainland China region setting and attempt binding; if that fails, contact DJI support with the serial, photos, and purchase receipt. The support team can confirm whether the unit is legitimate and whether there is an ownership lock. This process does not grant local warranty but helps you decide whether to return the drone or keep it with known limitations.
Most DJI agricultural drones can switch the controller and app interface to Spanish without issue. The authentication app itself also supports Spanish. The larger challenge is mapping and RTK compatibility: Chinese-region Agras drones may default to a Chinese map engine that does not render Peruvian fields in high detail. This can sometimes be mitigated with offline maps or third-party mission planners, but it’s a factor to verify before purchase. Reboot Hub performs a mapping and language pre-check for our drones to reduce this interoperability headache.
You need a commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading, and likely the services of a customs agent in Peru. The drone’s value must be declared; agricultural drones often fall under commercial machinery codes, which can attract both IGV and ad valorem duties. Because drones contain lithium batteries, additional dangerous-goods paperwork may be required. Always consult a Peruvian customs broker with the specific model and CIF value well before shipping. The DJI authentication process does not replace any SUNAT filing — it’s a purely technical equipment check.
At Reboot Hub, every pre-owned and refurbished DJI Agras drone is sourced directly from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain, graded under our “Pristine Pre-Owned” or “Flawless” standard, and backed by a 180-day warranty. Browse our inventory, compare models side by side, and skip the expensive surprises that often come with unverified imports. Explore graded DJI Agras drones now.
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