Drone Guides

Do You Need an African Import License for Bulk Used Drones from Spain in 2024? Customs & Duty Guide

By LauThomasUpdated June 12, 2026
Quick Answer

Importing a batch of used drones from Spain into an African country in 2024 is rarely a single‑form procedure. Whether you need an import license, what duties apply, and how to clear customs depends on three things: the destination country’s trade regime, the drone’s technical classification, and whether the batteries are shipped separately. In many cases a formal import declaration, proof of the drones’ used status, and compliance with local communications or aviation authority rules will be required — but a standalone “drone import license” is not universally mandated. The safest path is to treat the shipment as a commercial electronics import, confirm the Harmonized System (HS) code with your customs broker, and work with a supplier that provides a documented multi-point bench test record so officials can see the units are pre‑owned, not new stock being under‑declared.


Why the Spain–Africa Used-Drone Route Is Growing in 2024

Buyers across the continent are sourcing pre‑owned and refurbished drones from European markets for agricultural mapping, infrastructure inspection, mining surveys, and conservation work. Spain, with its strong logistics links to North and West Africa, has become a natural consolidation point. For a Ghanaian construction firm needing three M350 RTKs for site monitoring, or a Kenyan surveyor looking for a single Phantom 4 RTK, the economics often work better than buying new from a local dealer.

But moving electronics across borders, especially used ones, invites extra scrutiny. Customs authorities want to know that the declared value is honest, that the items aren’t e‑waste disguised as product, and that any radio transmitters meet local spectrum rules. This guide walks through the practical steps without pretending that any two African customs territories will treat the shipment identically.

At Reboot Hub we bench‑test every drone we grade to a defined standard — from battery health to gimbal calibration — so you receive units that are demonstrably pre‑owned yet ready to work. That documentation helps when customs asks, “How do we know these are used?”


Step 1: Understand the Destination’s Import Framework

Africa is not a single customs union. Your destination may fall into one of several economic blocs, each with its own tariff book and licensing norms. Below is a high‑level map; always confirm the latest position with a freight forwarder in the destination country.

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Bloc / Region Examples Import License for Electronics? Duties Tendency
ECOWAS (West Africa) Nigeria, Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire Usually not for finished electronics; however some states require a “product conformity” certificate (e.g., SONCAP in Nigeria) 5–20% depending on HS code; additional levies possible
SACU (Southern Africa) South Africa, Botswana, Namibia No standalone import license for most commercial electronics, but an import permit may be needed if drones are classified as “surveillance equipment” Varies; ad valorem duties plus VAT. South Africa’s SARS tariff book is detailed.
EAC (East Africa) Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda Pre‑export verification of conformity (PVoC) often applies for used electronics. An import permit from the communications authority may be needed for drones with cameras/transmitters. 0–25%; Common External Tariff bands apply
North Africa Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia May require an import license or technical approval from the aviation / telecommunications regulator, particularly for drones with GPS and data transmission Duties plus TVA/VAT; sometimes higher for “luxury electronics”
Franc Zone / CEMAC Senegal, Cameroon, Gabon Usually no drone‑specific import license, but attestation from the civil aviation authority can be requested during clearance Common External Tariff; used goods sometimes face a reconditioning fee

The table doesn’t provide a single answer because there isn’t one. Instead, it points to the two checks that almost always arise: customs classification and regulator notification. Where a specific local rule is not covered by an international anchor, you must check with the relevant national aviation authority or customs office.


Step 2: Classify the Shipment Correctly — HS Codes Matter

Customs officials don’t care that you call it a “drone.” They look at the Harmonized System code. Drones typically fall under HS 8806 or a related subheading that covers “unmanned aircraft.” However, if your units are disassembled or lack a camera, they might be classed as “parts” or “camera equipment,” which changes the duty rate. Work with your freight forwarder to present:

  • A commercial invoice that clearly describes each item as “used / refurbished multi‑rotor unmanned aerial vehicle” and lists the model and serial number.
  • A packing list separating airframes, batteries, chargers, and payloads.
  • A used‑goods declaration or bench‑test report that shows the unit has not been factory‑sealed. At Reboot Hub we issue a grading report aligned to our multi-point bench test standard; many brokers have been able to use it to substantiate pre‑owned status.

Batteries deserve their own attention. Lithium‑ion batteries above 100 Wh (often the case for commercial drones like the Matrice series) are classified as dangerous goods under UN 3480 when shipped alone, or UN 3481 when packed with equipment. Many African nations require the importer to have a dangerous goods permit or to use a licensed clearing agent. In practice, shipping batteries separately via air freight to certain West African ports can cause weeks of delay unless the paperwork is flawless. Ground or sea freight options (with appropriate DG packaging) sometimes simplify clearance.

Regulatory note: rules for importing lithium batteries change. Verify packaging and documentation requirements with the destination’s dangerous goods authority before shipment.


Step 3: Do You Actually Need an “Import License”?

The short answer: in most African countries, a generic importer’s license or a one‑time import permit is enough, rather than a special “drone import license.” However, there are exceptions:

  • If your drone is being imported for commercial operation, the local civil aviation authority (CAA) may want to see an operating certificate or a letter of no‑objection. This is not an import license per se, but customs may hold the shipment until the CAA clears it. For example, when importing a used drone for construction progress photos in Ghana, the GCAA may expect the importer to have started the process for a commercial operator certificate. If you have not, they may still release the hardware, but you risk enforcement later.
  • Drones with high‑resolution cameras or RF transmission beyond standard Wi‑Fi may be classified as restricted goods in some countries. A clearance permit from the defense or interior ministry might be required. This is more common for long‑range fixed‑wing survey drones than for consumer‑grade multi‑rotors like a DJI Mavic, but it is a risk that increases with the category of equipment.
  • Used goods sometimes require a pre‑shipment inspection certificate (e.g., a Certificate of Conformity) for electrical safety. In East Africa, PVoC certificates are mandatory for many electronics, and the inspection happens in the country of export. If you’re buying from Spain, the supplier should cooperate with an accredited inspector before the container leaves Valencia or Madrid.

A practical approach is to engage a customs clearing agent in the destination country before you pay the Spanish invoice. Give them the exact model numbers, quantities, battery specifications, and intended use. Their preliminary ruling often reveals whether a specific license is needed and how long it takes to obtain one.


Step 4: Spanish Export Side — Is There a License Requirement?

From a Spanish / EU perspective, civilian drones are generally not subject to dual‑use export control, provided they do not exceed certain endurance or payload thresholds and are not intended for military use. Under the EU Dual‑Use Regulation, most commercial multi‑rotors (like DJI Matrice 300 RTK) fall into the category of uncontrolled goods. However, if the drones are equipped with a laser scanner, a thermal camera with specific sensitivity, or certain flight controllers, an export authorization may technically be required. Always ask the seller to confirm the export control classification number (ECCN) or that a no‑license‑required determination has been made. For the vast majority of refurbished DJI drones in photographic or survey configuration, no Spanish export license is needed.

The bigger practical issue is VAT and proof of export. If you are a non‑EU buyer, the Spanish supplier should issue an invoice without IVA (VAT) for exports, provided the goods physically leave the EU within a set period and customs formalities are followed. Work with a freight forwarder that handles the Export Accompanying Document (EAD) so that you don’t end up paying Spanish VAT that is difficult to reclaim later.


Step 5: Customs Clearance — A Practical Walkthrough

Let’s assume you’re importing 10 refurbished DJI Phantom 4 RTK units from Barcelona to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Here’s what a typical clearance might involve:

  1. Pre‑shipment verification: Because Tanzania is in the EAC, used electronics need a Certificate of Conformity from a PVoC agent. The seller (or your appointed agent) arranges for a third‑party inspector in Spain to verify that the drones are not e‑waste and are electrically safe. The certificate is issued before shipping.
  2. Document submission on arrival: Clearing agent lodges the bill of lading or airway bill, commercial invoice, packing list, PVoC certificate, and a letter explaining the drones’ intended commercial use. They also submit the HS code you agreed upon.
  3. Regulatory hold: Customs may flag the shipment for the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA) because the drones contain radio transmitters. Your agent must present a type‑approval certificate for the drone model or a letter from TCRA stating that the units are permissible. If you don’t have it, the process can stall for days.
  4. Duties and taxes assessment: The TANSAD system calculates import duty (say 10%), excise duty (if applicable), and VAT (18%) on the CIF value. Because they are used, the valuation may be challenged — documentation showing the original purchase price and the current used‑market value helps avoid an arbitrary uplift.
  5. Payment and release: Once duties are paid and the regulatory hold is lifted, the consignment is released. Retain all documents for future tax or aviation authority audits.

If you’d rather not piece together every certificate yourself, sourcing units from a supplier that already provides a grading dossier simplifies steps 1 and 2. See how our grading standard supports border clearance.


What About the Mini Drones? Sub‑250 g and the Regulatory Myth

A common question: “Do I need an import license for a sub‑250 g drone like the DJI Mini 4 Pro?” From a customs standpoint, the weight class doesn’t change the import classification — it’s still an unmanned aircraft. However, in many African countries, aviation regulations exempt sub‑250 g drones from operator registration or remote‑ID requirements for flight operations. Customs, on the other hand, does not always align with aviation rules. A Mini 4 Pro being commercially imported still needs a proper customs declaration and may attract duties, just as a heavier drone would. The weight exemption is an operational privilege, not a customs exemption. Check with the local civil aviation authority for flight rules, but don’t assume that “under 250 g means no paperwork at the border.” In practice, some clearing agents in Johannesburg have been able to fast‑track Mini shipments by showing the aviation authority’s waiver, but this is not guaranteed everywhere.


Special Cases That Mirror Global Intent Trends

While the core of this guide addresses the Spain–Africa lane, many of the underlying principles apply wherever used drones cross borders. You might encounter situations that reflect other common FAQs from the global marketplace, including:

  • Using a drone for electrical line inspection — in some jurisdictions, flying a drone for powerline surveys requires a specific operator certificate from the aviation authority, and that certificate may need to be presented at import if customs ties the hardware to a registered operator. This does not mean an additional import license, but the absence of an operator certificate could delay clearance if the authority is consulted.
  • Volunteer SAR teams — search and rescue organizations using drones often operate under emergency or special exemptions. When importing drones on behalf of a volunteer unit, a letter of support from the national disaster management agency or police can smooth customs, especially in countries where the aviation authority may otherwise query the end‑user.
  • Commercial license costs — the cost of a CAA commercial drone license (be it for construction progress photos in Ghana or topographical surveys in Brazil) is separate from the import process. However, in some markets, showing that you have initiated or hold a valid remote pilot certificate can help justify the commercial nature of the import to customs.
  • Roof inspections over private property — even in a private garden, flight rules often apply. That doesn’t directly affect import, but when the drone is shipped and customs asks for its intended use, a vague answer can trigger a request for additional CAA clearance. A clear, honest description alongside any supporting flight‑permission documentation reduces risk.

These parallels highlight that the import process is interwoven with the operational regulatory environment. Treat the shipment not as an isolated transaction but as one node in a compliance chain. The rules referenced above are derived from broad frameworks (EASA, FAA, etc.) to illustrate general practice. For any specific national rule, consult the relevant national aviation authority or venue directly — regulations change, and this article cannot replace a live legal check.


Checklist: What to Prepare Before You Ship from Spain to Africa

Use this as a starting document pack. Tailor it to your destination.

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Item Why It Matters Who Provides It
Commercial invoice with declared used value Basis for duty assessment Seller / Exporter
Packing list (airframe, batteries, accessories) Speeds cargo inspection Seller / Exporter
Multi‑point bench‑test / grading report Proves the unit is used, functional, and not e‑waste Refurbisher (e.g., Reboot Hub)
Battery safety data sheet (SDS) and UN 38.3 test summary Required for dangerous goods clearance Battery manufacturer or refurbisher
PVoC / CoC (if destination mandates it) Mandatory for used electronics in EAC, ECOWAS programs Third‑party inspector
Proof of radio frequency compliance / type approval Satisfies telecom regulator Manufacturer or importer’s agent
Letter of end‑use / intent Explains the commercial purpose to CAA or customs Importer
CAA operator certificate or receipt of application (where relevant) May be requested by customs when clearing commercial‑class drones Importer
Destination country customs agent’s valuation form Helps avoid over‑valuation Local clearing agent

Having this pack ready before the container or pallet departs Spain greatly lowers the chance of a hold. It does not eliminate the risk, because a customs officer may still request an on‑the‑spot re‑inspection, but documentation tilts the balance in your favour.


Duties and VAT: What to Expect (Without Pretending Exact Numbers)

Tariff schedules in Africa shift. Rather than quoted percentages that could be outdated within months, here is a model for how duties are generally applied to used drones:

  • Ad valorem duty on the transaction value (CIF) at a rate determined by the HS code. In many countries this is a single‑digit percentage, but where drones are seen as “photographic or cinematographic apparatus” the rate can be higher.
  • VAT or GST applied on the duty‑inclusive value, commonly between 15% and 18% in many African markets.
  • Additional levies: some states add a “processing fee,” a “customs service charge,” or an ECOWAS community levy. These are usually small but can surprise first‑time importers.
  • Used‑goods adjustments: customs may use a reference price if the declared value seems too low. Providing a bench‑test report and evidence of previous ownership often supports the declared figure.

To get a near‑accurate estimate, ask your clearing agent for a provisional duty calculation based on the HS code and declared value before the goods land. This is standard practice and costs little.


A Word on Warranty and Supplier Credibility

Bringing in a batch of used drones is as much about the hardware’s reliability as about the paperwork. A unit that fails on the first job because it was wiped clean but never tested will cost more in downtime than any import duty saved. When comparing sources, look for:

  • Defined grading: terms like “Pristine Pre‑Owned” should be backed by a written standard — not merely a sticker. Review the Reboot Hub drone grading standard for an example of how bench‑test criteria get documented.
  • Warranty: a 180‑day warranty on refurbished units (which is what Reboot Hub provides on qualifying models) signals that the refurbisher stands behind the technical work. This is often the deciding factor for buyers who plan to deploy units immediately.
  • Battery health reporting: a supplier should disclose the cycle count and remaining capacity so you can plan battery replacements upfront.

If you’re comparing models for a specific task — say, a Mavic 3 Enterprise vs. a Phantom 4 RTK for topography — see how their payload, endurance, and sensor specifications line up in the DJI drone comparison hub. Choosing the right model from the start reduces the need for costly returns or re‑exports.


FAQ

Do I always need an import license to bring used drones from Spain into Nigeria?

Not as a standalone “drone license.” Nigeria operates an import prohibition list and a SONCAP conformity program for electronics. Drones typically require a SONCAP certificate (product certificate + certificate of conformity) rather than a bespoke import license. Additionally, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority requires a permit for drone operations, and customs may ask for evidence that the importer has applied. If you’re importing more than a couple of units for resale, register with the Nigerian Customs Service as an importer. Check the latest procedure with a Lagos‑based clearing agent.

What’s the biggest reason used‑drone shipments get stuck at African borders?

In our experience, it’s a combination of undervaluation disputes and missing battery documentation. When customs sees a drone declared at a low used value without a credible bench‑test report, they may hold it for re‑valuation. Lithium‑ion batteries often require a dangerous goods declaration and UN 38.3 test summary; if absent, the shipment can be rejected at the port or airport. A third common snag is radio frequency approval — some countries expect the drone model to be type‑approved by the telecoms regulator.

Can I import a DJI Mini 3 (under 250 g) duty‑free under a de minimis exemption?

Weight‑based de minimis exemptions for duty are rare in Africa; they are more common in postal or courier channels with value caps (e.g., USD 50–100). A sub‑250 g drone imported commercially will typically still be classified under the UAV HS code and attract duty and VAT. Some courier‑cleared low‑value shipments might slip through, but formal clearance for a bulk lot is almost certain to attract charges. Confirm the de minimis threshold in the destination country’s customs code.

How can I prove the drones are genuinely used, not new stock, to avoid higher duties?

Provide a combination of documents: (a) original proof of purchase or refurbishment record showing the manufacturing date, (b) a multi-point bench test report documenting flight hours, battery cycles, and cosmetic condition, and (c) photographs of the actual units with visible serial numbers. When those are presented alongside a credible commercial invoice, the chances of being taxed on a “new” valuation decrease significantly.

Does a refurbished drone from China or Spain affect import duties differently?

The country of origin, not the country of export, determines whether a preferential tariff rate applies. Some African nations have trade agreements that reduce duties on goods originating from certain partners (e.g., EU, China). If the drone was originally manufactured in China but refurbished in Spain, the origin rules can become complex. Ask your freight forwarder whether a EUR.1 certificate (for EU‑origin claims) is available; if not, the standard MFN rate likely applies. The supplier’s location in Shenzhen or Hong Kong often means the direct China‑origin route is simpler, but that’s a different supply chain discussion.

Is it possible to clear a used drone shipment without a local agent?

Technically, in some countries, yes — particularly if you are an established importer with your own customs bond. However, for a first‑time or occasional importer, a licensed clearing agent is strongly recommended. They handle valuation discussions, regulatory queries from the CAA or communications authority, and the dangerous goods processing. Their fee is usually a fraction of the potential storage and demurrage costs if something goes wrong.


Final Thoughts and Next Steps

Importing used drones from Spain into Africa in 2024 isn’t a regulatory obstacle course if you prepare the paperwork diligently, but it is not a simple courier packet. The key is to treat each shipment as a project: define the HS code early, collect the conformity certificates, get the battery documentation in order, and involve a customs agent who knows both the electronics category and the local aviation authority’s quirks. Where specific numbers or fees are not cited in this guide, they depend on the destination country’s current tariff schedule and should be verified with a licensed professional. Rules change, and no written guide can substitute for direct advice from the relevant national customs authority.

If you are sourcing the hardware, consider whether the supplier’s post‑sale support simplifies the import itself. A refurbisher that provides a detailed grading report, a transparent battery health statement, and a 180‑day warranty gives you more than a functional drone — it gives you a document trail that customs officials respect. Browse our ready‑to‑ship inventory and see how the standard bench‑test work is described for each grade. When you’re ready to compare models, the interactive comparison tool can help you find the airframe that fits your mission profile without importing units that won’t meet the job’s requirements. Finally, for a deeper understanding of what every certification step means on the bench, the full grading methodology is available here.

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