DJI and other drone companies get a partial reprieve in the US – but the ban on new models still stands

A DJI Mavic 3 Pro drone in flight in a forest
(Image credit: DJI)

  • US Department of Commerce withdraws proposal to ban all Chinese drone imports
  • Separate FCC ban on new foreign-made drones to continue
  • Future of DJI in US remains unclear

As we reported recently, the so-called "DJI ban" recently implemented in the US is actually a ban on all new foreign-made drones, which seems likely to make buying drones harder and more expensive in the country.

But here's something to cheer up US-based drone users hunting for nuggets of good news amidst the doom and gloom: the Department of Commerce has decided not to make things even worse by restricting the import of all Chinese-made drones into the country.

This proposed ban (which is separate to the FCC ban introduced on December 23 2025) would have restricted fresh stock of previously approved drone models like the DJI Mavic 3 Pro, HoverAir X1 and Antigravity A1 from being imported into the US for sale.

Antigravity A1 in flight

The Antigravity A1 should remain on sale in the US (Image credit: James Abbott)

The future remains murky

According to Reuters, this move may come as a result of a partial thaw in relations between the US and China ahead of a meeting between the countries' respective presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping in April 2026.

While this means it won't get immediately worse for anyone trying to buy a Chinese-made drone in the US, the future is much murkier. The FCC's separate ban covers any foreign-made drones that have yet to receive FCC approval, which means future DJI, Autel, Antigravity and Zero Zero Robotics (the owner of HoverAir) models are unlikely to be available in the States barring intervention from the US government.

The FCC ban does include a provision for specific future models to be approved and allowed in for sale, but this doesn't seem likely to happen in the current climate, and the uncertainty surrounding the rules (not to mention the tariff situation) may discourage companies like DJI from participating in the US market at all.

With no US-based drone manufacturers currently offering genuine competition to DJI, the outlook for consumers isn't particularly rosy, but they'll be able to continue buying previously approved Chinese-made models – for now, at least.


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TOPICS
Sam Kieldsen

Sam has been writing about tech and digital culture for over 20 years, starting off in video games journalism before branching out into the wonderful worlds of consumer electronics, streaming entertainment and photography. Over the years he has written for Wired, Stuff, GQ, T3, Trusted Reviews and PC Zone, and now lives on the Kent coast in the UK – the ideal place for a camera reviewer to ply their trade.


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