Sparse DJI drone shelf in store with soft light and empty packaging showing low stock

FCC Ban Blocks New DJI Drones

At a Glance

  • The FCC barred DJI from importing any new drones into the U.S. on December 23, 2025
  • Existing DJI drones remain legal to buy, own, and fly
  • Only future foreign-made drones are affected; current inventory stays on shelves
  • Why it matters: Buyers who want a DJI drone should purchase now, as future models may never reach U.S. stores

The December 23, 2025, import restriction on DJI has created confusion about what consumers can and cannot do with drones. The rule blocks new foreign-made drones, yet Amazon still lists nearly the entire DJI lineup for immediate purchase.

What the Ban Actually Covers

The restriction targets only future imports. Nothing DJI manufactured in the past is affected. No one will confiscate drones already in circulation. Flying a drone remains perfectly legal.

The policy reaches beyond DJI. It covers all foreign-produced drones, including models from Autel Robotics, HoverAir, and others. DJI dominates headlines because it controls the largest share of the consumer market.

Why Shelves Stay Stocked

U.S. law requires every device that transmits radio frequencies to obtain FCC approval. Drones rely on radio links for control and video, so they fall under this requirement.

All affected companies now sit on the FCC’s Covered List. Placement on the list denies import approval, effectively blocking new sales. Retailers still ship existing inventory because those units already cleared customs before the cutoff date.

A Narrow Exemption Appears

Last week the FCC amended the Covered List to exempt drones already vetted through the Defense Contract Management Agency’s Blue UAS program. The agency stated that equipment on the Blue UAS list “do not currently present unacceptable risks to the national security of the United States.”

Drone hovers above radio transmitter with FCC approval sticker and motion lines showing radio frequency transmission

For consumers, the change matters only if you planned to buy a $13,600 Parrot Anafi USA Gov thermal model. Most hobby-grade aircraft remain excluded.

No Domestic Rush to Compete

Removing the market leader has not triggered a wave of U.S.-designed replacements. Skydio, once viewed as the likely beneficiary, has pivoted away from consumer sales to focus on enterprise and government contracts.

Commerce Department Plan Shelved

While the FCC rule limits future sales, a separate Commerce Department proposal could have grounded drones already in private hands. That more drastic plan has been tabled, leaving current owners unaffected for now.

What the Covered List Ban Does

  • Blocks import of all future foreign drones and components
  • Prevents manufacturers from refreshing U.S. inventory
  • Keeps new models off American retail sites

What the Ban Does Not Do

  • It does not remove existing drones from stores
  • It does not outlaw owning or flying a current drone
  • It does not alter FAA regulations; all standing rules remain in force

Outlook Hinges on Diplomacy

Drone policy is now entangled in broader U.S.-China trade politics. Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping are scheduled to meet in April, but few expect a quick resolution. Until relations stabilize, manufacturers lack a path back onto U.S. shelves.

Buying Advice

If you have considered purchasing a DJI or other foreign drone, buying sooner rather than later is prudent. Once current stock sells through, replacements may not arrive.

Gray-market imports will probably surface, yet importing an unapproved drone risks legal penalties. News Of Fort Worth does not recommend that route.

Key Takeaways

  • Inventory already inside the country can still be sold
  • Future models face an indefinite import freeze
  • Domestic alternatives have not materialized at scale
  • April diplomatic talks could reshape the landscape, but no guarantees exist

Author

  • Natalie A. Brooks covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Fort Worth, reporting from planning meetings to living rooms across the city. A former urban planning student, she’s known for deeply reported stories on displacement, zoning, and how growth reshapes Fort Worth communities.

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