Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
Flying a drone you already own feels simpler than starting from scratch. But bringing a pre-owned DJI aircraft into Japan for paid wedding videography, real estate shoots, or stock footage flips that simplicity on its head. The gear itself isn’t the only variable. Japan’s Civil Aeronautics Act and MLIT operating rules look at weight, airspace density, purpose, and — critically — whether the operator has been certified inside the Japanese system.
As a China-based seller of pre-owned and refurbished DJI drones, Reboot Hub sees this puzzle daily. Drones shipped from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain often end up in the hands of traveling creators, resellers, and hybrid operators who need to bridge two regulatory worlds. Every unit we ship goes through a multi-point bench test by MOHRSS Level-3 certified technicians, graded under our "Pristine Pre-Owned" or "Flawless" standard, and backed by a 180-day warranty. That thoroughness on the hardware side only underscores how much the paperwork side needs equal attention.
Japan divides drone rules into a few hard gates. The first gate is weight. 100 grams is the threshold. Most camera-ready DJI drones — a Mavic 3, Air 3, or even a Mini 4 Pro with a heavier battery — cross it easily. If your used aircraft weighs 100 g or more (takeoff weight), you must:
A drone imported from China, Canada, or Hong Kong doesn’t get a registration pass because it’s used. The system doesn’t grandfather foreign registrations — you re-register it in Japan, period. Reboot Hub often advises buyers to factor in this registration window before any commercial shoot. If you’d rather not do every compliance check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard for how we test and grade each aircraft so your attention can go to the legal prep.
The second gate is purpose and location. Flying for recreation in an unpopulated area under 150 m altitude and outside controlled airspace follows a relatively straightforward permission structure. But the moment money enters the frame — selling the output, flying for a client, even building a portfolio intended for future revenue — you move into the realm that JCAB and MLIT regulate as “aerial work.”
Using a used DJI drone imported from China for commercial wedding photography, real estate shoots, or tourism content typically requires:
A practical approach is to treat the used DJI hardware and the operator license as two parallel workstreams. The drone itself — as long as it passes the bench tests Reboot Hub performs and can comply with Remote ID — is rarely the bottleneck. The permit process, by contrast, takes time and often requires a Japanese-speaking representative or a local aviation consultant. We recommend building at least four to six weeks into a project timeline for initial permission, and checking with the regional civil aviation bureau for any temporary flight restrictions around seasonal events or high-density tourism windows.
If you plan to sell the captured footage to a Japanese client, that contract itself doesn’t change the operator requirement — the person physically manipulating the controls must hold the appropriate MLIT authorization.
A subset of the search queries — “Do You Need a Secondhand Goods Dealer License in Tokyo to Resell Used DJI Drones?” — touches a different Japanese law: the Secondhand Articles Dealer Act (古物営業法). Under this act, anyone engaged in the business of buying or selling used goods in Tokyo or any other prefecture needs a Secondhand Goods Dealer License (Kobutsusho) from the local Public Safety Commission.
Here’s where it gets subtle:
Reboot Hub operates from the supply side in China, not the resale side in Japan, so our experience is limited to the condition grading and refurbishment standard — but we often hear from Japanese resellers who use our quality benchmarks to differentiate their inventory. If you’re building a used-drone resale business in Tokyo, factor the license application (police background check, office inspection, processing time) into your launch plan.
The process for MLIT drone registration for a second-hand DJI drone imported from China follows the same channel as a new domestic purchase, with a few extra documentation touchpoints:
| Step | What you need | Notes for foreign operators |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase and import | Invoice, airframe serial number, Remote ID module details | Keep all customs and shipping documents; you’ll need to show the aircraft’s origin and serial number consistency. |
| Create an MLIT account | Valid residence card or Japanese representative, verified email | The registration portal requires Japanese-language input and a domestic address. |
| Register the drone | Airframe photo, serial number photo, Remote ID configuration | The system checks the serial against manufacturer databases. |
| Pay registration fee | Online payment | Fee is set by MLIT; confirm the current amount on the official portal — we note it here only as a reference to budget for, not a fixed price. |
| Affix registration ID | Label or engraving visible on the exterior | Must remain legible. |
| Activate Remote ID | Drone must broadcast ID data during every flight | Test with a compatible receiver app before the first commercial job. |
A drone graded “Pristine Pre-Owned” and bench-tested by Reboot Hub typically arrives with a clean, legible serial number and fully functional Remote ID — a strong indicator that the technical registration hurdles will be lower than with an undocumented unit. Still, registration is an MLIT process, not a manufacturer one, so operator diligence remains essential.
Searches around “MLIT Japan Drone Registration for Foreigners with a Canadian License: Temporary Use Process” and “Can Canadians Fly Drones in Japan with Transport Canada License Reciprocity?” point at the same reality: there is no temporary exemption for foreign recreational or commercial operators based solely on a home-country license.
A foreign operator intending a short-term commercial project (say, a Canadian wedding filmmaker bringing a used DJI drone from Vancouver to photograph a wedding in Kyoto) still must:
We recommend treating any paid aerial work as a full local process. The phrase “temporary use” is sometimes misunderstood as a short-cut; in the Japanese regulatory context, it simply means the permission is granted for a limited period, not that the requirements are smaller. Check with the relevant national aviation authority (JCAB/MLIT) for the most current temporary operation pathways, as these can shift with policy updates around international events.
Export queries tie several threads together. If you purchase used DJI drones in Japan (or import them into Japan first) and then send them to Australia for commercial rental or resale:
As a seller operating from China, Reboot Hub’s multiple-point bench test and grading standard gives international resellers a reliable quality baseline, but we don’t ship from within Japan — our inventory starts in the Shenzhen/HK supply chain. If your business model involves routing refurbished drones through Japan, we recommend mapping the license and registration layers before committing to volume.
| Your activity | Reg. (≥100 g) | Remote ID | MLIT permission | Japanese pilot cert. | Secondhand dealer license |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fly recreationally in a low-population area with a used drone imported from China | Yes | Yes | Possibly not, but check airspace class | Recommended but not mandated for pure recreation | No |
| Paid wedding videography with a drone from Hong Kong or Canada near guests | Yes | Yes | Almost certainly required | Yes, Japanese-issued | No (unless buying/selling the drone itself) |
| Resell used DJI drones regularly on Mercari/eBay in Tokyo | For personal use: no. For inventory flown for demo: yes | During flight demo: yes | For flight demos: yes | If demo involves commercial flights: yes | Yes, if the activity qualifies as a secondhand goods business |
| Export refurbished drones from Japan to Australia for commercial rental | Yes, while in Japan | Yes | For test flights: yes | For test flights: yes | Likely yes |
| Canadian filmmaker using a used drone in Japan for a short-term assignment | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes, Japanese certification — no reciprocity | No |
Yes, it’s possible, but you’ll need to register the drone with MLIT if it’s 100 g or above, activate Remote ID, and obtain a Japanese-issued drone operator license plus MLIT aerial work permission. A foreign pilot certificate alone won’t satisfy the requirement. Reboot Hub’s graded and bench-tested pre-owned drones can meet the hardware standards, but the licensing path is entirely within Japan’s jurisdiction.
You create an MLIT account, provide the drone’s serial number, airframe photo, and Remote ID configuration details, and pay the registration fee. Because the unit is imported, keep all customs documentation to demonstrate the serial number chain. Once registered, affix the ID to the drone and confirm Remote ID broadcasts correctly. Check the official MLIT unmanned aircraft portal for the current fee and any updates.
If reselling is a regular business activity — purchasing drones with the intent to turn a profit — you likely need a Secondhand Goods Dealer License from the Tokyo Public Safety Commission. Occasional private sales of personally used drones generally don’t trigger the requirement, but once the pattern becomes commercial, the prefectural police expect you to apply. The distinction involves frequency, inventory financing, and intent, so we recommend checking with a local legal specialist for your exact situation.
Japan does not have a reciprocity agreement with Transport Canada. A Canadian Advanced Operations certificate does not translate to a Japanese operator license. Canadian operators planning paid or high-risk flights in Japan must go through the Japanese certification process and register their drone locally. For short recreational visits, weight and airspace rules still apply, but certification is not currently required — though rules can change; verify with JCAB/MLIT before traveling.
You’ll need to register the drones in Japan if they’ll be flown even for testing, likely obtain MLIT permission for any commercial flight demonstrations, and hold a Japanese pilot certificate for those flights. On the business side, a Secondhand Goods Dealer License likely applies if you’re trading in used drones. Export controls may also apply depending on the drone model. Once in Australia, the operator must meet CASA requirements, so check with the Australian aviation authority separately.
Almost certainly yes. Wedding videography is commercial aerial work, typically near bystanders and sometimes in populated areas. MLIT requires both a Japanese-issued operator certification and prior permission for such flights, plus the usual registration and Remote ID. The origin of the drone — whether Hong Kong, Canada, or China — doesn’t change the requirement; the activity is what triggers the license obligation.
No amount of regulatory prep fixes an airframe that can’t pass registration or fails mid-shoot. That’s where a bench-tested, graded pre-owned drone makes a practical difference. At Reboot Hub, every unit — whether destined for a Tokyo-based reseller, a Canadian filmmaker on location, or a wedding creative in Kyoto — has been through a multi-point bench test by MOHRSS Level-3 certified technicians. Our "Pristine Pre-Owned" and "Flawless" grading tiers give you a documented understanding of what you’re flying before it reaches customs. We back refurbished units with a 180-day warranty, lowering the chance of early hardware surprises while you work through Japan’s licensing steps.
If you’re evaluating which DJI model fits the Remote ID and payload requirements for your next Japan project, our DJI drone comparison page can help you narrow down options by camera, flight time, and weight class. To understand exactly what each grading tier means in terms of cosmetic condition, battery cycles, and bench test results, see our drone grading standard. And for a deeper look at how we test each aircraft before it leaves the workshop, visit The Reboot Hub Standard.
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