Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 11, 2026
When a refurbished DJI drone arrives from China and won’t power on, shows camera errors, or looks nothing like the listing, the practical path forward depends on how fast you move. At Reboot Hub, we see the aftermath of poor cross-border refurbishment all the time — units graded “like new” with no real bench test, no flight-log review, and no transparent warranty. That’s why our own process at our Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply-chain facility includes a multi-point bench test, a clear Pristine Pre-Owned or Flawless grade, and a 180-day warranty on refurbished drones. (See how we grade every unit: Drone Grading Standard.) If you’re facing a defective unit right now, the sections below walk through verification, buyer protections, return logistics, and what to keep in mind when you next purchase.
Even a perfectly refurbished drone can get damaged in transit, but many defects are signs of a unit that was never properly reconditioned. Taking a few minutes before you sign the receipt is your strongest moment of leverage.
Set your phone to record before you open the package. Capture the shipping label, any external box damage, and every layer of wrapping. Look for:
If anything is visibly wrong, refuse acceptance or note the damage on the courier’s delivery record. Even a small written remark helps when you later open a claim with Correios or the carrier.
A refurbished drone should still pass DJI’s serial-number check. Connect the aircraft to the DJI Fly or DJI Pilot 2 app, go to the “About” page, and confirm the serial matches the box and the seller’s description. For units bought for topography or professional mapping in Brazil, verifying authenticity also matters for future regulatory compliance — while a drone’s hardware doesn’t determine airspace authorization, commercial operations in Brazil fall under ANAC RBAC-E 94 and typically need DECEA SARPAS clearance. Starting with a genuine, properly activated DJI product keeps your registration path straightforward.
Other quick authenticity signals:
If the app reports that the drone is already bound to another account, you’re dealing with a unit that wasn’t properly deactivated — a frequent issue with poorly graded refurbished stock. This alone is a strong indicator to stop and request a return.
Once you’ve accepted the package, the focus shifts from physical rejection to documented evidence and formal complaints.
The Código de Defesa do Consumidor offers protections for defective products, even imported ones, when the seller operates with some presence in Brazil or when you can establish a consumer relationship. In practice, holding an overseas merchant accountable under the CDC can be challenging, but it is not impossible. Documented paths include:
Important: rules and enforcement priorities change. This is not legal advice; verify the current CDC application to cross-border purchases with a qualified professional.
If you bought the drone through a marketplace like AliExpress or a cross-border listing on Shopee, the quickest path is often the platform’s buyer protection system. The general sequence:
For credit card purchases directly from a store, contact your issuer and ask about a chargeback for “goods not as described.” Brazilian card issuers have procedures aligned with international card network rules, but you typically need to show you first attempted to resolve the issue with the merchant.
If the damage clearly occurred in transit — the box is crushed, the drone shows impact marks matching external packaging damage, or the shipment disappeared — file a complaint with Correios. For international parcels, the sender usually must initiate the claim, but as the recipient you can report the damage to Correios immediately. Keep the original packaging and the damaged item for inspection. Correios typically requires a written complaint, the tracking number, and a declaration of the item’s value. Deadlines for reporting damage are short; check Correios’ published international claims practice as soon as you notice a problem.
If the seller or the platform approves a return, shipping a used drone from Brazil to China without it arriving in worse shape — or generating a large customs bill for the recipient — takes careful preparation.
A drone sent in its original retail box alone rarely survives the return journey. Use a double-box method:
Courier services (DHL, FedEx, and Correios EMS) offer declared-value coverage up to a certain limit. When you insure a used or refurbished drone for return, present the original purchase invoice and, if possible, an evaluation of its current market value. A drone classified as “defective/for repair” may have a lower insurable value, but stating the true refurbished purchase price is usually the safest approach. For corporate returns — say a construction firm sending back a batch of defective mapping drones — a single consolidated shipment with a detailed packing list and declared value per unit helps avoid customs snags and ensures the insurance covers each item proportionally.
When the drone arrives back in China, customs will treat it as an import unless your paperwork clearly identifies it as a returned defective product or warranty repair. Prepare:
For batches — whether a São Paulo promotion company importing used DJI drones for resale as incentives or a construction firm returning several failed units — a customs broker (despachante aduaneiro) on the Chinese side is strongly recommended. The broker can file for the proper exemption and avoid the shipment sitting in storage. Always confirm the broker arrangement with the receiving party before dispatching the package.
| Scenario | Best Immediate Action | Key Document | Common Pitfall |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drone DOA — bought on AliExpress | Open dispute + upload unboxing video | Screenshot of DJI activation error | Seller asks you to cancel dispute — don’t |
| Used DJI for mapping arrived with dead gimbal | Contact seller, request partial refund or full return | Technical report from a DJI-authorized service | Forgetting to lock gimbal during return shipping |
| Correios shipment arrives with crushed box | File a complaint at your local Correios office immediately | Photos of external damage and inspection record | Missing the reporting window |
| Construction firm returns multiple defective units | Agree on a consolidated return via DHL with China-side broker | Commercial invoice marked “defective return,” packing list per serial | Mixing batteries without dangerous-goods paperwork |
| Batch of promotional drones for resale in SP held at customs | Work with a Brazilian despachante to clarify importation basis | Receita Federal import declaration showing purpose | Not calculating ICMS and federal taxes upfront |
If managing a cross-border return feels like a second job, consider how you source drones in the first place. Our refurbishment facility in China puts every unit through documented bench tests and grades the drone honestly before it ever ships. Explore the Reboot Hub standard and see what a pre-verified drone looks like.
First, don’t let the platform dispute window close while you wait. Escalate inside the marketplace and send a clear summary of your attempts to the platform. Outside the platform, file a complaint with Procon if the seller has any Brazilian online presence. For higher-value losses, consult with a consumer attorney about bringing a small-claims action; the challenge remains enforcing a judgment against a foreign entity, so parallel pressure through the payment channel (credit card chargeback) is often the strongest practical lever.
Report the damage to Correios as soon as you notice — ideally on the day of delivery. Keep all packaging and the damaged item for inspection. Fill out the international complaint form at your local post office, providing the tracking number, a description of the damage, and proof of value. Because the compensation process can vary by the origin country’s postal agreement, check Correios’ latest international claims guidance directly.
Double-box with rigid foam, remove and ship batteries separately under dangerous-goods rules, and lock the gimbal with its original guard. Use a carrier that allows full declared-value insurance and attach an invoice marked “defective return.” Photograph the packing process and the final sealed box so you have evidence if the shipment is damaged on the way back.
The CDC can apply when a foreign seller maintains a Brazilian representation, warehouse, or consistent commercial activity directed at Brazil. In practice, consumers have successfully used the CDC to get redress from platforms and importers that maintain a local legal presence. Enforcement is not automatic, however; you may need Procon mediation or judicial action. It’s best to consult a professional about how the code applies to your specific case and to not rely on the CDC alone as a fast fix without additional steps.
Use the DJI Fly or Pilot app to check the serial number, activation status, and whether the drone is bound to another account. Confirm the physical serial matches the box and app. For professional use cases such as topography, also verify that the model’s hardware can support the payload you intend to fly and that the unit has a clean flight log consistent with a refurbished-grade product — all checks that a trustworthy refurbisher performs before shipping.
Stop using the units and document each drone’s defect with photos and serial-number records. Negotiate with the seller for a consolidated return; ideally arrange a China-side customs broker to handle the import clearance under “warranty return.” Ship through a courier familiar with commercial returns, insuring the full batch value, and provide the broker with a detailed packing list and invoices marked “defective goods return.” If the company frequently imports drones, building a standing relationship with a despachante in both Brazil and China streamlines future return logistics.
When a refurbished drone arrives dead on arrival, the hours spent chasing sellers, filing forms, and repacking boxes eat into the exact time you planned to spend in the air. A better baseline starts with a refurbisher that treats verification as a standard step, not an extra. At Reboot Hub, units are graded Pristine Pre-Owned or Flawless after a multi-point bench test, and we back what we ship with a 180-day warranty. Compare DJI models across our current inventory, review our grading and testing standards, or browse our full selection to see how a pre-verified drone changes the purchase equation.
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