Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
When you buy a DJI drone from a shop in Shenzhen, a Taobao store, or a gray‑market reseller and then try to claim warranty service in Ghana, India, Spain, Canada, Chile, Kenya, or any country with an official DJI service centre, the first hurdle is often the same: the local centre wants a valid, traceable proof of purchase that connects your unit to a specific seller and purchase date. Without that document, your drone can look like it has no warranty start date, and the claim may be treated as out‑of‑coverage.
At Reboot Hub we see this challenge daily. As a China‑based supplier of meticulously graded, pre‑owned and refurbished DJI drones that pass a rigorous multi‑point bench test – handled by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians with chip‑level repair capability – we make sure every unit ships with documented purchase records for exactly this reason. But if you bought elsewhere, the principles below still apply.
DJI’s global warranty terms are not uniform across every region, and local service centres have some discretion. Still, experience from buyers across multiple countries shows a consistent pattern. The golden document is a commercial invoice or retail receipt that clearly states:
If you bought from a non‑authorised dealer, the local centre may push back harder, but a proper invoice still gives you a fighting chance. Where you bought from a private seller or a small shop that gave you only a handwritten note, your task becomes assembling a chain of evidence.
Situations where proof‑of‑purchase might be denied or questioned
We recommend checking the serial number on DJI’s official verification page early, before you even file a claim. A mismatch or a unit that returns no record can significantly complicate your case.
Don’t wait for the seller to respond. Pull together:
Many overseas sellers, especially those on large Chinese platforms, are accustomed to providing “commercial invoices” for customs purposes. Phrase your request like this:
“Could you please send me a formal commercial invoice that includes the purchase date, your company name and address, the product model, and the serial number? I need it for a warranty claim in my home country.”
If the seller is a Chinese dealer that refuses to cooperate, do not escalate with aggression. Instead, start documenting the refusal.
This works for many countries, including Ghana, Kenya, Spain, Chile, and Canada where consumer protection agencies or small claims avenues exist, and DJI support may accept a combination of documents as a “valid equivalent”:
Local consumer protection bodies in Ghana (e.g., the Consumer Protection Agency) or in Spain (municipal consumer offices) can help mediate if the drone is genuinely defective and you have reasonable documentation. But be aware: a heavily incomplete file dramatically lowers your chance of success.
The table below summarises typical outcomes when you present a valid proof of purchase to a local DJI repair centre, depending on where the drone was bought and what type of dealer you used.
| Purchase source | Proof of purchase strength | Warranty recognition in Ghana / Spain / Canada / Chile / Kenya / India1 |
|---|---|---|
| Overseas DJI Authorised Store (e.g., DJI Germany online) | Very strong – official invoice with serial | Usually honoured, but logistics may require shipping back to country of purchase; check with local centre. |
| Authorised physical shop in China (store with DJI listing) | Strong – formal fapiao (official tax invoice) | Recognised in principle; centre may request translation. Anecdotal evidence shows mixed results in Kenya and Chile. |
| Large Chinese e‑commerce platform (Taobao, JD) – authorised reseller | Moderate to strong – can produce commercial invoice | Warranty possible if invoice is detailed and seller cooperates. India buyers report frequent requests for an importation declaration. |
| Gray‑market / non‑authorised dealer (AliExpress, random shop) | Weak – often informal invoice, no serial | High risk of denial. You must build a supplementary evidence package. In Spain, ARCO rights may help if unit was sold as new, but success is not guaranteed. |
| Private seller (classifieds) | Very weak – no business documentation | Almost always considered out‑of‑warranty by DJI unless you can trace to an original authorised purchase. |
| Refurbisher (e.g., Reboot Hub with documented bench test & 180‑day warranty) | Mixed – depends on refurbisher’s paperwork | The refurbisher’s own warranty generally applies, not DJI’s. A meticulous refurbisher will provide a dated warranty certificate and purchase receipt that give you clear protection. |
1 Disclaimer: The experiences summarised come from user reports and are not official DJI policy statements. Warranty handling varies by regional service centre; check with your local DJI support team and the relevant consumer protection agency.
DJI Agriculture drone DOA claim from China at a physical shop in Kenya Agriculture drones (Agras series) are often sold through specialised channels. If you bought one from a Chinese dealer and it arrives dead, the DOA window is short. You will typically need:
Refurbished sold as new – Canada, Spain, elsewhere If you bought a drone that was advertised as new but turned out to be refurbished (e.g., sealed box but flight logs show prior activations), and DJI denied warranty in Canada or Spain based on that, you are potentially facing a misrepresentation issue rather than a warranty dispute. Steps to take now:
The scenarios above require careful document gathering and persistence. When you buy from a refurbisher that treats documentation as part of the product, you walk into a claim with a much stronger hand. Reboot Hub’s multi‑point bench test and grading process produces a clear date trail, and the included purchase records are designed to satisfy local requirement expectations – whether you need them in Ghana, India, or anywhere else. Learn more about the Reboot Hub standard here.
Start by collecting all digital traces: payment receipt, platform messages, tracking number, and a screenshot of the seller’s store. Write a formal email to the seller requesting the invoice again, stating that a warranty claim is pending and the necessary document is missing. If no response, contact the platform’s dispute resolution (if applicable). In parallel, reach out to DJI Spain support and explain the situation, attaching your evidence package. Under Spanish consumer rules, you can also consult your local Oficina Municipal de Información al Consumidor; they may help mediate if the drone is faulty. Nothing can substitute a proper invoice entirely, but a solid paper trail can sometimes be accepted as an equivalent.
Taobao order pages contain a transaction timestamp, product link, and price. Take a full‑page screenshot (showing URL bar) and save the associated Alipay transaction record. Ask the seller or your forwarding agent to issue a commercial invoice with the drone’s serial number. If that’s not possible, request a “proforma invoice” from the agent. Additionally, some buyers have used the China Post or courier shipping label showing dispatch date as supplementary proof. While DJI India may request an importation document, starting with a translated, notarised copy of your platform order can help.
Yes, it is possible, but the process is document‑intensive. You will need clear visual evidence of the dead‑on‑arrival state (detailed video), the original purchase receipt from the physical shop showing the serial number, and a written report from a Kenyan drone technician or droning company confirming the failure. Contact both DJI China and the nearest DJI Agriculture support hub. Be prepared for the possibility that the unit may need to be shipped back to China for evaluation. The outcome often hinges on how cooperative the original shop is.
This is not strictly a warranty issue but a misrepresentation problem. Get written confirmation from DJI Canada stating the unit was previously activated or fails “new” criteria. Then, contact the seller and request a full refund or a price adjustment, leaning on the evidence. If the seller is unresponsive, open a dispute with your payment provider under “not as described”. In parallel, you can report the matter to the Canadian Anti‑Fraud Centre or your provincial consumer protection office. Note that DJI’s warranty does not apply to units where the purchase condition was misrepresented by a third party.
If you are in Germany and bought a drone from an official DJI Store or an authorised dealer listed on DJI’s German website, the warranty is generally straightforward. If you bought from a non‑authorised seller – even a legitimate‑looking shop – the local repair centre may require extra proof and could ultimately treat the device as an import from another region. Your product is still covered by the global warranty in principle, but the practical hurdle is proving purchase date and origin. Keep the invoice, request a Verkäuferbescheinigung (seller’s certificate) if that’s an option, and be ready to escalate politely. If the seller is based in China, the process mirrors the Ghana/Spain cases above.
First, review the denial reason in writing. If it explicitly says “non‑authorised dealer,” gather your purchase proof and a detailed explanation of the transaction. Contact DJI global support (often reachable via the Live Chat) and ask for a case review, attaching all documents. Chile’s consumer protection agency, SERNAC, can be a resource if the product is defective and you have a valid purchase receipt – you can submit a complaint. Unfortunately, DJI’s own warranty policy does not always cover units from unauthorised sources, even if new in box, so the outcome is uncertain. This underscores the value of verifying the seller’s status before buying.
Because the core query driving this guide centres on Ghana, here is a condensed checklist for a buyer pursuing a DJI warranty claim in Accra or Kumasi after an overseas purchase:
No single document can guarantee acceptance, but a complete folder strongly reduces the chance of a summary denial.
Cross‑border drone purchases can save you money or give you access to models not available locally, but they come with a paperwork responsibility that a domestic official‑store purchase doesn’t demand. Protecting yourself begins the moment you unbox the drone. Save everything, photograph the serial label, and check the unit’s activation status early.
If you want a path where many of these friction points are removed from the start, browse Reboot Hub’s graded pre‑owned and refurbished inventory. Every drone ships with a detailed purchase record, a multi‑point bench test report, and the backing of a 180‑day warranty handled by MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians who know DJI hardware down to the chip level. Compare DJI models and find your next drone or review the warranty policy that covers you.
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