DJI has quietly up to date its “Suspension of Service” assist web page with an extended checklist of merchandise which have both reached end-of-service or are scheduled to lose assist within the close to future. After the service suspension deadline stipulated on the assist web page, these merchandise will not obtain official repairs, spare elements, customer support, or firmware updates.
The up to date assist web page mentions 111 merchandise, together with a number of drones, from the early Phatom(s) to growing older Mavic fashions. For those who’ve been flying DJI drones for some time, for enjoyable or for skilled video creation, there is a good likelihood that one thing you personal is on that checklist. Though your gadget will not cease working, you need to positively take note of when official assist to your mannequin ends, particularly in case you personal an older model.
There are a number of drones which have reached the tip of their service in 2025. Launched in 2016 and 2017, respectively, the Phantom 4 Superior and the Phantom 4 Professional are not supported by DJI, as of June 1, 2025. The Mavic Professional Platinum, additionally introduced in 2017 with a platinum-colored casing, reached the tip of its service life on April 30, 2025.
A number of client and industrial-grade drones are not supported
One of the crucial well-liked consumer-grade drones by DJI, the Mavic Air (launched at $799 in 2018), additionally joined the unsupported checklist on January 1, 2025. One other entry-level drone, the DJI Spark (launched for $500 in 2017), and the pro-grade Mavic Professional (launched for $749 in 2016) had been faraway from the corporate’s assist cycle on October 1, 2024.
In the meantime, different members of the Phantom 4 collection, the Phantom 4 and the Phantom 4 Professional Obsidian Version, have already been on the not-supported checklist since July 2023. DJI additionally discontinued official assist for the Phantom 3 collection, together with the Phantom 3 Superior, Phantom 3 Professional, Phantom 3 Commonplace, and the Phantom 3 SE, in January 2023.
Different client drones, such because the Phantom 2 (2.4G) and the Phantom 3 4K, have not had any official assist for over three years. Whereas a number of industrial drones had already misplaced assist in February 2024, just a few are earmarked for his or her remaining phase-out for January 2026.
DJI notes that the end-of-service is “to advertise the event and utility of latest merchandise and applied sciences.” In the meantime, the corporate can also be bracing for a ban on gross sales in the US if the nationwide safety authority does not full a proper safety audit by December 23, 2025.