Following its announcement earlier today, the US FCC's ban on new foreign-made drones and parts is now effective, targeting DJI amid national security fears for major events. DJI decries lack of evidence, US groups cheer boost to domestic industry, while users eye parts supply.
The FCC formalized its decision on December 22, 2025, adding uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS) from foreign manufacturers—including data transmission devices, flight controllers, sensors, cameras, batteries, motors, and more—to its national security Covered List, effective immediately on December 23.
This follows an Executive Branch interagency review and builds directly on the Countering CCP Drones Act within the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act, which allowed firms like DJI one year to demonstrate no security risks. DJI sought audits but the ban advanced on existing intelligence.
Market leader DJI (70% global share as of 2023, known for premium tech) expressed dismay: "While DJI was not singled out, no information has been released regarding what information was used... Concerns about DJI’s data security have not been grounded in evidence and instead reflect protectionism."
The FCC cited threats like surveillance or disruption at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, stating: "The federal government is taking additional actions to safeguard Americans and restore American airspace sovereignty."
US manufacturers, though often costlier and less advanced, are poised to gain. AUVSI President Michael Robbins hailed it: "By prioritizing trusted technology... the FCC’s action will accelerate innovation, enhance system security, and ensure the US drone industry expands."
Consumers can keep using existing drones, but hobbyists fear scarce replacement parts. Federal agencies faced prior restrictions on Chinese models.