Reboot Hub · Buying Guide

How to Verify Genuine DJI Drones from Chinese Sellers by Serial Number for Korea Registration 2025

Updated June 11, 2026

Quick Answer

  • Verify the serial through DJI’s online product verification tool or the DJI Fly app – a genuine serial is the first strong indicator.
  • Confirm no activation lock by asking the seller to show the drone powered on, unbound from any DJI account.
  • Cross-check for theft by contacting local police or KOTSA – there is no public stolen-drone database in Korea, so direct inquiry helps lower risk.
  • Request a live video call or pre-shipment video to inspect the physical unit, the serial in-app, and that the drone functions.
  • Keep MOLIT/KOTSA registration requirements in mind – a genuine, non-stolen, unencumbered serial streamlines the process.

South Korea’s drone community continues to grow, with everything from commercial cinematography to FPV racing demanding reliable gear. At the same time, a large share of pre-owned and refurbished DJI drones are sourced from China’s Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply chain. While this marketplace offers great value, Korean buyers face a practical question no one wants to learn the hard way: Is this drone genuine, and will it pass local registration without issues?

At Reboot Hub, we operate directly in that China supply chain (Shenzhen/Hong Kong), with MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians who perform chip‑level repairs, bench‑test every unit, and grade each drone. We know which checks actually matter. Still, we believe the safest buyer is an informed one, so this guide walks through how to verify a DJI drone from a Chinese seller by serial number – with the Korean registration landscape in mind.


The Korean Regulatory Context (MOLIT / KOTSA)

South Korea regulates drone operation through the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MOLIT) and the Korea Transportation Safety Authority (KOTSA). Depending on the weight and intended use of your drone, registration with KOTSA may be mandatory. While exact weight thresholds and processes can evolve, typically any genuine DJI drone used for anything beyond pure‑recreation micro‑class operation needs official registration.

A key requirement in that process is the drone’s unique serial number. If a serial doesn’t match DJI’s records, is associated with a different model, or triggers a theft flag, registration can be delayed or denied. This makes pre‑purchase verification more than just a nice‑to‑have – it helps you stay compliant.

Disclaimer: Drone regulations in Korea are subject to change. Always confirm current MOLIT and KOTSA requirements directly with the relevant authorities before purchase or registration.


Why Serial Number Verification Matters When Buying from China

A DJI serial number tells a story that a low‑price listing often omits. It can reveal:

  • Authenticity – Counterfeit units often use cloned, invalid, or missing serials.
  • Activation lock status – A drone still bound to a DJI account cannot be activated by a new owner.
  • Stolen or reported status – In Korea, you can inquire with local police or KOTSA; a mismatched or flagged serial is a warning sign.
  • Compatibility with Korean racing events – Many competition organisers explicitly ban counterfeit equipment. A verifiable serial helps avoid disqualification.

Whether you’re buying through AliExpress, a direct Chinese supplier, or any pre‑owned channel, the serial number is your most objective, traceable piece of data.


How to Verify a DJI Drone’s Serial Number for Authenticity

Step 1 – Find the serial number

The drone’s serial number is usually located:

  • On a sticker inside the battery compartment or on the airframe.
  • In the DJI Fly or DJI Go app (About → Device Information).
  • On the original packaging, if included.

Ask the seller to share the serial before shipping. A serious, transparent seller will provide it without hesitation.

Step 2 – Check the serial through DJI’s official channels

DJI maintains an online product verification service. Without inventing a URL, you can search for “DJI product serial verification” and enter the serial on the official DJI.com support area. A genuine, unmodified serial should:

  • Be recognised as a valid DJI product.
  • Show the correct model (e.g., Mavic 3, Air 3, etc.).
  • Not return an error or “not found” message.

For counterfeits, the serial is often completely invalid, belongs to a different model, or is flagged. A mismatch is a strong indicator of a problem – it doesn’t prove a scam by itself, but it warrants stopping the transaction until more checks are done.

Step 3 – Secondary check via the DJI app

If the seller can power on the drone during a video call, ask them to connect it to the DJI Fly app. A genuine DJI drone appears correctly in the device list. The app will not recognise a sophisticated fake that lacks DJI’s internal firmware handshake. A seller refusing to demonstrate this live should be treated as a red flag.


Checking Activation Lock Before You Buy

An activation lock means the drone is still bound to a previous owner’s DJI account. Even after a factory reset, the drone will demand that account’s credentials when someone tries to activate it. This effectively bricks the device for a new owner.

How to check before money changes hands:

  1. Request a short video where the seller powers up the drone, connects to the app, and navigates to the device settings. If the settings menu shows the drone as unbound or offers a “Bind to Account” option without asking for a password, the unit is likely unlocked.
  2. Live video call is even better. Watch the seller start the drone from cold. If the app immediately pushes an “enter DJI account password” screen, the lock is active.
  3. Ask directly: “Has this drone been unbound from your DJI account? Can you show me?” A trustworthy seller will understand why this matters.

If you’d rather not do every check yourself, you can lean on a source that already does. At Reboot Hub, activation lock checks and multi‑point bench tests are part of the pre‑shipment standard. See The Reboot Hub Standard for how we handle every unit.


Verifying If a Drone Has Been Reported Stolen in Korea

Many Korean buyers wonder: can I run a serial number through a police database to see if the drone is stolen? Unlike vehicle registers, there is no nationwide public online database for stolen drones in South Korea.

That doesn’t mean you can’t take precautions. A practical approach:

  • Get the serial number from the seller.
  • Contact your local police station (경찰서) and ask if they can check a drone serial number against their internal stolen‑property records. In some jurisdictions, they may assist.
  • Inquire with KOTSA – while they primarily handle registration, they may have guidance on verifying if a drone’s serial has been associated with theft or loss.
  • For exports to Europe, the same principle applies: complete the domestic check in Korea before the unit leaves the country. There is no unified international stolen‑drone database, so direct verification with Korean authorities is the most reliable step.

Documented verification – such as a police statement or a KOTSA record check – can be a “strong indicator” that your drone is clean, though it does not eliminate all risk.


Spotting Counterfeit DJI Drones: A Quick Comparison Table

Counterfeit DJI drones are increasingly convincing, and some are even banned from Korean racing competitions. Below is a checklist to help you assess a unit before registration.

↔ Swipe the table to see all columns
Checkpoint Genuine DJI Indicator Counterfeit Red Flag
Serial number verification Passes DJI’s online checker, matches model Invalid, “not found”, or serial belongs to another model
DJI Fly app recognition Detected immediately, shows correct model, firmware updates available Not recognised, or app crashes/gives generic device name
Build quality Seamless moldings, consistent paint, high‑quality plastic smell Rough seams, weak structural feel, strong chemical odour, paint mismatch
Packaging & labels Holographic seal where applicable, sharp printing, correct fonts Blurry text, missing safety labels, no holographic element
Activation lock behaviour Prompts DJI account binding or shows “unbound” Shows a non‑DJI lock screen or generic “password” request
Flight stability & telemetry Rock‑solid hover, telemetry feeds through app Unstable flight, random disconnects, missing telemetry data

If multiple red flags appear, assume the unit is counterfeit until proven otherwise. A real serial number alone is not enough – counterfeits sometimes clone a legitimate number, so cross‑check with the app and physical inspection.


Pre‑Shipment Video Proof and Live Video Call: How to Use Them

When you buy from a seller you’ve never met in China, a pre‑shipment video or a live video call (often via WeChat, WhatsApp, or similar) becomes an essential layer of verification. Here’s what to request:

  • The drone being powered on from a cold state, showing the DJI splash screen if applicable.
  • The serial number in the app – ask the seller to scroll through the device info screen slowly.
  • Gimbal movement and camera feed – a quick pan/tilt shows the gimbal is functional.
  • Activation lock confirmation – the app should indicate the device is unbound.
  • A brief hover test (if safe and possible) – just a few seconds to confirm motors, stabilisation, and no warnings.

A live video call gives you the most confidence because you can ask the seller to perform real‑time actions. Pre‑recorded videos are still useful, but they can be re‑used across listings. Pairing both methods lowers the chance of misrepresentation.

This approach is especially relevant if you’re an FPV racing pilot importing a DJI air unit or goggle system. Many Korean racing federations will inspect serial numbers and require genuine gear. A thorough remote inspection before shipping can save you from a disqualification down the line.


Registering the Drone in Korea: How the Serial Number Fits In

When you register a DJI drone with KOTSA, you’ll generally need:

  • Your personal identification (Korean ID or business registration).
  • The drone’s serial number and model information.
  • Proof of purchase or ownership (invoice, receipt).
  • In some cases, confirmation that the drone meets Korean frequency/communication standards.

A drone with a verified, genuine serial number that passes DJI’s check and shows clean with local authorities is significantly easier to register. A unit that raises questions about authenticity or ownership can become a compliance headache. Before you buy, ask yourself: If KOTSA checked this serial, would it pass muster?


If You’d Rather Skip the Legwork

Performing all these checks takes time and some technical know‑how. That’s why we designed the Reboot Hub standard to handle them before a drone ever reaches a buyer. Our MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians in Shenzhen/Hong Kong run every unit through a multi‑point bench test, confirm the serial authenticity, ensure full unbinding, and grade the drone as either Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless – backed by a 180‑day warranty on refurbished units. It’s not a promise of a lower-risk world, but it removes many of the variables that Korean buyers ordinarily have to manage from afar.


FAQ

How can I check if a DJI drone from a Chinese seller has an activation lock before I buy it?

Ask the seller to power on the drone, connect it to the DJI Fly app, and show you the device settings screen. If it asks for a DJI account password before allowing access, the lock is active. A live video call is the most reliable way to see this live – a pre‑recorded video can be staged, but a real‑time demo reduces the chance of that.

What’s the best way to verify a DJI serial number is genuine for Korean drone registration?

Enter the serial into DJI’s official product verification page (searchable on DJI.com). Then confirm the model matches and the drone is detected properly in the DJI Pilot/Fly app. A passing check is a strong indicator of authenticity, though it shouldn’t be the only check you do – counterfeits occasionally clone a valid serial.

Is there a Korean police database I can use to check if a used DJI drone is reported stolen?

There is no public, searchable online database for stolen drone serials in South Korea. The most practical step is to contact your local police station with the serial number and ask if they can check internal records. You can also consult KOTSA for additional guidance. Always verify the current process, as it may change.

I’m an FPV racing pilot in Korea; how can I be sure a drone I buy from China isn’t a counterfeit that would get me banned?

Prioritise a live video call inspection that shows the DJI app recognising the unit, along with a clear view of the serial number. Combine that with DJI’s online serial verification. Also request photos of internal labels and look for the build quality signs in our table above. Most Korean race organisers explicitly ban fakes – a documented verification trail helps you demonstrate the unit is genuine if challenged.

How do I request a pre‑shipment video or live video call from a seller on AliExpress or a Chinese supplier?

Simply message the seller before payment: “Can you send a short video showing the drone powered on, the serial number in the app, and a quick gimbal test? Or can we schedule a live video call?” Honest suppliers selling genuine DJI gear typically accommodate this. If a seller refuses or makes excuses, weigh that heavily in your decision.

Can I still register a refurbished DJI drone from China with KOTSA if the serial number checks out?

Yes, in most cases. As long as the drone has a valid, authentic serial number and you can provide reasonable proof of ownership (invoice, receipt), registration is usually possible. Refurbished units from reputable sources, such as those that go through a thorough bench‑test process, are not inherently barred. Just ensure the serial is not associated with a reported theft or an unremovable activation lock. Confirm the latest KOTSA guidelines directly.


From serial checks to video verifications, a disciplined buyer can significantly lower the risk of ending up with a counterfeit, locked, or stolen drone. But if you’d rather skip the detective work and shop from a source that already applies these checks, explore our full inventory.

Browse our selection of Pristine Pre‑Owned and Flawless DJI drones, each covered by a 180‑day warranty. Compare models on our drone comparison page or dive into our grading standard to see how units are qualified before they ship. When you’re ready, visit our store and pick the drone that fits your next flight in Korea.

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