Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
what São Paulo construction operators need to know before upgrading:
The DJI Matrice 200 series — the M210, M210 RTK, and the M210 V2 — has been a staple on construction sites for years. Survey teams, crane coordinators, and progress‑monitoring crews relied on the platform’s interchangeable payloads and early RTK positioning. But as project complexity grows across São Paulo, so does the need for longer flight endurance, stronger weather resistance, and more resilient data links in the dense urban canyons of Avenida Paulista or the sprawling work sites near the Marginal Tietê.
The Matrice 350 RTK is the direct modern successor, and it brings several practical gains that directly affect construction workflows. Because Reboot Hub referees these platforms daily, we’ve seen where the jump really matters:
If you’re still flying a fleet of 200 series platforms, the conversation isn’t about if replacement makes sense — it’s about how to price the transition without freezing other project budgets. And that leads to the numbers question São Paulo specialists ask most often.
Light CTA — At Reboot Hub, our MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians restore every M350 RTK through chip‑level rework and a multi‑point bench test, so you are stepping into a platform that has already been proved.
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When you’re replacing five aircraft, small spec differences multiply into daily operational impacts. The table below lines up the areas that matter most for construction monitoring, cadastral mapping, and volumetric measurement.
| Capability | Matrice 200 series (M210/M210 RTK) | Matrice 350 RTK | Construction‑site impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ingress protection | IP43 (light spray) | IP55 (driving rain) | Fewer weather shutdowns during São Paulo’s summer storms |
| Obstacle sensing | Forward, upward, downward | Six‑direction (full coverage) | Safer operation near towers, crane booms, and scaffolding |
| Max flight time (quoted) | Up to 38 min (M210 RTK) | Up to 55 min | Covers larger site footprints on a single battery set |
| Battery system | TB50/TB55, no hot‑swapping | TB65, hot‑swappable | Minimal ground time when rotating five units |
| Transmission | Lightbridge 2 / OcuSync 2 | O3 Enterprise + 4G dongle | Stronger video in high‑interference construction zones |
| RTK positioning | Optional module on some variants | Integrated RTK module | Consistent centimetre‑level accuracy without extra accessories |
| Refurbished availability | Rare; aging platform | Regularly available through Reboot Hub with 180‑day warranty | Lowers acquisition cost for fleet buyer |
The M350 RTK isn’t just a paper upgrade. For a São Paulo contractor flying five drones simultaneously — perhaps two on cadastral survey, two monitoring earthworks, and one on safety inspection — the endurance, weather tolerance, and obstacle sensing aggregate into a significant daily productivity difference.
Many fleet managers start the budgeting exercise by pulling the international MSRP and multiplying by five. That approach misses the two largest cost drivers in Brazil:
1. The import tax stack
Drones imported into Brazil generally attract II (import tax), IPI (industrialised product tax), PIS/COFINS social contributions, and ICMS — a state‑level VAT that in São Paulo often pushes the effective rate well past what most other markets see. The cumulative effect can turn a single M350 RTK into a six‑figure Real commitment even before you add a payload.
2. Local distributor mark‑up and certification
Authorised dealers in São Paulo carry the cost of inventory, after‑sales support, and ANATEL homologation. While they sometimes offer a modest volume break for five units, the discount is rarely as deep as operators hope. More importantly, not every dealer can sell you an aircraft that is fully cleared for the payloads you intend to use — for instance, the Zenmuse P1 or L2 for surveying — without separate certification steps.
Because actual line‑item quotes vary by exchange rate, freight, and the current tax regime, stating a fixed “price in Reais” today would mislead rather than help. A practical approach is to request three quotes from reputable São Paulo‑based DJI Enterprise partners, ask them to separate the hardware cost from the landed tax components, and compare that total against the alternative path: procuring refurbished units from a specialist supplier outside Brazil and managing your own import clearance.
Mid CTA — If you’d rather not perform every certification and condition check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard. Our multi‑point bench test and grading system take the guesswork out of used‑condition unknowns.
How we grade and bench‑test →
The search patterns we see — “Cambiar Flota de 5 DJI Matrice 300 por 350 RTK en Bogotá,” “Stockholm reseller price comparison 2024” — tell us that fleet buyers around the world are wrestling with the same math, just inside different tax and regulatory borders.
Bogotá, Colombia
Colombia applies import duties and a 19 % VAT on most enterprise drones. Local DIAN valuation practices can vary, so the final cost in pesos colombianos for five M350 RTK aircraft depends heavily on the declared customs value and the trading partner agreement under which they enter. Firms we’ve spoken to often turn to the Bogotá network of AeroCivil‑recognised operators who can advise on both pricing and operational permits. There is no single “official DJI price list for Colombian enterprises” — DJI Enterprise partners in the region set their own end‑user pricing, and bulk trade‑in subsidies are negotiated case‑by‑case.
Stockholm, Sweden
In Sweden, consumers and businesses benefit from transparent EU import procedures, but local reseller margins can still be substantial. Resellers in Stockholm may accept a trade‑in of a Matrice 300 fleet, but the buy‑back value is not fixed; it typically reflects their confidence in reselling the units, often to a secondary dealer or international buyer. Some operators find that selling their M300s separately — to a refurbisher like Reboot Hub, for example — and then sourcing M350 RTK replacements from the same specialist yields a cleaner financial outcome than a bundled trade‑in.
In every market, the official “exchange programme” operators search for doesn’t really exist as a single global DJI scheme. Instead, value recovery from old airframes is a negotiation between the fleet owner, the reseller, and the secondary market — a negotiation where having a well‑documented, graded aircraft can strengthen your position.
Construction companies often ask us, “Does DJI run a fleet exchange program where I send in five M200s and pay the difference for five M350 RTKs?” The short answer is no — DJI does not operate a global, factory‑direct trade‑in desk for enterprise drones. Some regional dealers may offer a purchase credit for used aircraft, but the offered value is frequently low because the dealer must then move those older units on their own.
That’s where a dedicated refurbishment and remarketing pipeline becomes strategic. Reboot Hub sits in the Shenzhen‑Hong Kong supply chain, the epicentre of DJI’s component ecosystem. Our MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians perform chip‑level diagnostics and repair — replacing worn flight controllers, IMU modules, or gimbal ribbon cables at the board level instead of simply swapping an entire core assembly. After repair, every drone goes through a multi‑point bench test under load conditions, and is then assigned a grade: “Pristine Pre‑Owned” for aircraft that meet near‑new cosmetic and functional standards, or “Flawless” for fully operational units with minor external wear.
For a São Paulo contractor replacing five M200s, sourcing five M350 RTK aircraft as Pristine Pre‑Owned units could significantly reduce upfront capital outlay compared to buying five brand‑new units through the local authorised channel — even after accounting for shipping and import clearance. And because every refurbished M350 RTK from Reboot Hub carries a 180‑day warranty, you retain protection that a casual second‑hand purchase simply wouldn’t offer.
Of course, importing refurbished electronics into Brazil still means navigating ANATEL and customs clearance. The article section below outlines the steps to check.
This is not legal advice, and rules evolve. Treat the points below as a map to guide your conversation with a local import partner or despachante. For definitive, current requirements, check with the relevant national aviation authority and telecom agency.
Reboot Hub supplies the airframes; you remain responsible for local compliance. This split of duties is one reason a thorough pre‑flight paperwork push makes the difference between a smooth fleet transition and a grounded investment.
There’s no single Real amount that fits every importer because the final number depends on the customs classification, the exchange rate on the day of entry, and the specific tax arrangement (e.g., whether the company can offset ICMS credits). A prudent step is to collect quotes from at least two São Paulo DJI Enterprise dealers and one international refurbished‑unit provider, then request landed‑cost estimates from a licensed despachante. This triangulation gives you a range rather than a surprise.
Direct trade‑ins through Bogotá resellers are case‑by‑case and often hinge on the condition and remaining battery cycles of your M300s. Some commercial partners may offer a discount on a five‑unit order if you hand over the old fleet, but the peso value will fluctuate with the TRM (representative market rate) and whatever import costs the reseller absorbed. Many operators choose to sell the M300s separately to an international refurbishment buyer and then source replacement aircraft from the same channel to gain a clearer picture of net expenditure.
IP55 ingress protection cuts weather‑related downtime, the integrated RTK module removes the need for an external module, six‑direction obstacle sensing broadens safety margins around cranes and scaffolding, and hot‑swappable TB65 batteries let you keep a multi‑drone rotation airborne with fewer spare sets. For a five‑unit operation, these gains compound throughout a working week.
DJI does not publish a single authorised price list binding all enterprise resellers in Brazil or Colombia. Official partners set end‑user pricing themselves, and they rarely post public bulk‑rate cards. The best path is to submit a formal inquiry through the DJI Enterprise website to find your regional contact or to consult known São Paulo/Bogotá integrators who bundle aircraft, payloads, and training.
No universal, factory‑run exchange programme is currently available. Some regional dealers may offer upgrade discounts, but those are ad‑hoc promotions rather than a standing policy. A more reproducible strategy is to liquidate the older aircraft through a specialist refurbisher (like Reboot Hub) and then purchase pre‑owned or new M350 RTK units as a replacement batch, letting the resale value offset part of the acquisition.
Every M350 RTK is repaired and diagnosed at the component level by technicians holding China’s MOHRSS Level‑3 certification. The aircraft then undergoes a multi‑point bench test covering propulsion, transmission, gimbal stabilisation, and sensor calibration. Units are graded as “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” based on objective condition criteria. All refurbished units include a 180‑day warranty, which covers the aircraft and core components. This process is not a “quick check” — it’s the same discipline we apply to aircraft destined for demanding commercial workflows.
Replacing five Matrice 200 platforms with M350 RTK airframes is a capital decision, but it doesn’t have to drain your equipment budget in a single quarter. By separating the hardware source from the local tax and certification handling, São Paulo building contractors gain flexibility: you can either pay the full local‑channel premium for a turnkey solution, or you can put in some clearance work and take advantage of a rigorously refurbished fleet that has already been checked by chip‑level engineers.
At Reboot Hub, our inventory regularly includes M350 RTK drones that meet the “Pristine Pre‑Owned” grade, each backed by the same 180‑day warranty and documentation you need for your internal asset register. Before you sign a five‑unit order, it’s worth seeing what that alternative looks like — because in a city where construction margins are under constant pressure, an informed sourcing choice can free up budget for the payloads, software, and training that turn a drone fleet into a genuine daily asset.
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Disclaimer: This article offers a practical framework based on industry experience, not legal or tax advice. Drone import rules, tax rates, and aviation regulations in Brazil, Colombia, Sweden, and other jurisdictions change frequently. Always confirm the current requirements with the relevant national aviation authority, telecom regulator, and a qualified import agent before purchasing or flying.
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