What occurs when DJI, the world’s main maker of drones, is now not welcome within the United States? You would possibly assume different dronemakers would see an enormous alternative with their competitor out of the image. That didn’t occur.
In the 15 months because the United States triggered an computerized ban on future DJI merchandise, no firm has rushed to serve the shoppers, prosumers, photographers, videographers, farmers, surveyors, and extra that use DJI gear. Instead, US dronemakers are largely targeted on a extra profitable alternative: a billion {dollars} the Pentagon has earmarked for drones that kill.
Drone professionals are scared, says Vic Moss, cofounder of the Drone Service Providers Alliance, an advocacy group that represents over 33,000 pilots nationwide. “We don’t have what we need to complete the jobs we do if we don’t have DJI drones,” he tells The Verge.
But no one is able to filling DJI’s footwear, consultants say. And those that may need tried are being scared off by Trump coverage.
Just earlier than Christmas, the FCC banned all future “foreign” drones, not simply DJI, from coming into the United States. Chinese dronemakers, an estimated 90 % of the drone market, are out.
Last 12 months, issues have been trying up for Zero Zero Robotics, one of many few Chinese dronemakers ever to step out of DJI’s shadow within the US. In 2024, my colleague Thomas Ricker gave its HoverAir X1 a glowing evaluation; regardless of early points, the corporate’s upscale X1 Pro and Promax made it into Costco and Best Buy shops. In August 2025, it introduced a possible holy-grail product: a self-flying drone that may take off and land on water. It was on my shortlist of corporations that may thrive if DJI bought hosed.
But in December, after the Trump administration instituted its de facto import ban on all future overseas drones, Zero Zero’s US backers started to fret they could by no means obtain the waterproof drone they paid for. What was anticipated to be a ban on simply two Chinese dronemakers, DJI and Autel, had changed into a ban on each shopper dronemaker outdoors the US — and Zero Zero hadn’t managed to outrun that ban.
No system with a radio may be imported, offered, or marketed within the US until the FCC authorizes it first, and that’s precisely what the FCC has stopped doing for foreign-made drones and foreign-made Wi-Fi routers. Devices licensed earlier than the ban are allowed, however Zero Zero didn’t clear two surprising hurdles.
First, the FCC stopped certifying devices between October 1st and November thirteenth due to the US authorities shutdown. Second was the FCC’s shock ban on December twenty second. In whole, Zero Zero had solely two slender home windows of alternative, roughly 40 days every, after it began taking backers’ cash.
Zero Zero has but to obtain FCC approval for the HoverAir Aqua, public information present. In the in the meantime, the corporate is slowly starting to supply refunds. Publicly, the corporate has not admitted that its US-bound Aqua drones are useless within the water, although.

In January, it merely advised Indiegogo backers that “the recent addition of foreign-made drones to the FCC’s Covered List has introduced significant regulatory uncertainty” and promised to ship them “as soon as possible.”
In February, it wrote that: “We are actively working through the necessary external processes to enable your shipments.”
As of March, the corporate was nonetheless suggesting that US backers can merely wait for their shipments “as we navigate the regulatory process.” But it additionally started providing to ship drones to Canada or different places for pickup outdoors the US — and it has individually advised backers that “if the US ban remains in place, we’re happy to process a full refund for your order.”
Zero Zero third-party spokesperson Jacob Hauge wouldn’t inform The Verge what it’s truly doing to “navigate the regulatory process” or what proportion of its backers are within the US, suggesting the corporate doesn’t wish to share extra information with the general public or its opponents.
As far as we’re conscious, Chinese corporations like Zero Zero solely have a couple of strikes: they’ll sue (like DJI did), they’ll halt shipments indefinitely, or they’ll apply for “Conditional Approval” with the FCC — which implies submitting a plan to fabricate its drones within the US.
Unlike Zero Zero, an organization named Antigravity managed to string the needle.
On December third, it put the world’s first 360-degree drone on sale at Best Buy, precisely midway by the window between the federal government shutdown and the overseas drone ban. The FCC processed its paperwork on November 18th, simply 5 days after it bought again to work, and so the Insta360-developed model has one drone — and just one — it will probably freely promote within the US.

It’s off to a great begin. The Antigravity A1 had already offered 30,000 models and made it to Costco by mid-January; now, it’s raked in tens of hundreds of thousands of {dollars} in world gross sales, Antigravity US CEO Michael Shabun tells The Verge.
But, the corporate’s ambitions don’t cease at only one drone, says Shabun. “The A1 was just our first product to market. There’s a number of products coming soon that are going to have different focuses, and 360 drones are just one of those.”
In an interview, Shabun drops a couple of hints about these future merchandise:
- “How do we revolutionize the drone by making it more sophisticated and more knowledgeable and more intuitive?”
- “We really want to explore non-consumer applications, like what if you pair a super intelligent drone as part of a camera crew for a live sports broadcast?”
- “We’re talking to law enforcement, we’re talking to emergency response, we’re talking to fire about how they use the product and what improvements we would need to make in order for it to fully be this incredible tool for them.”
- “We’re talking to [Google] about enabling Antigravity for aerial Street View.”
Some of those options would possibly work with the prevailing Antigravity A1. Shabun says an April firmware replace will let the drone “automatically detect obstacles and go around them,” and the corporate’s exploring give skilled broadcasters “a series of preframed shots that you cut to with a switcher” sooner or later.
But he additionally says the corporate is “exploring” the opportunity of manufacturing new drones within the US. He’s not pretending future drones can get round Trump’s ban with out that situation.
Shabun wouldn’t commit to US manufacturing, to be clear, and even say whether or not Antigravity has filed for the FCC’s conditional approval. “Of course our plan is to localize as much as we can, but I can’t comment on feasibility at the moment until we fully vet what that process looks like for us.”
But it feels like there’s no different possibility. He suggests Antigravity gained’t sue: “Our first solution is never to litigate” — and it gained’t pull out of the US. “There’s no way we’re ever going to veer away from the US market.”
“If compliance means we need to have US-based manufacturing, that’s what we’re going to look into,” he says.
Antigravity is the one Chinese drone producer that’s even publicly entertained the opportunity of US manufacturing because the pandemic, so far as I’m conscious — earlier than that, DJI did announce it might assemble “Government Edition” drones in California again in 2019, and Autel introduced a $10,000 “Made in USA” enterprise drone in 2020 the place solely 25 % of the drone got here from China.
What about corporations outdoors China? I’m afraid not one of the ordinary suspects have any curiosity — or no less than none that they wish to share with the general public.
GoPro, which give up the drone enterprise in 2018 after its Karma drone flopped, declined to remark. Parrot, pushed out of shopper drones in 2019 however which went on to construct the US-government authorized Anafi drone, declined to remark. Sony, which discontinued its $9,000 Airpeak cinematography drone in 2024, didn’t reply to a request for remark. Anzu, which licensed DJI tech for its business Raptor drone, declined to remark.
I did hear again from Skydio, although.
In December 2019, Skydio made probably the most spectacular drone I’ve ever used. The Skydio 2 may really fly itself, dodging obstacles alongside the best way. But the next summer time, Skydio started a three-year pivot to enterprise and authorities drones. Despite guarantees, it by no means launched one other shopper mannequin.
Don’t anticipate that to alter now. In 2024, when it turned clear that DJI was dealing with down a ban, I requested if the corporate would possibly wish to take up the torch. Former Skydio comms VP Trevor Hammond replied:
As for what the longer term holds, we are 100% targeted on serving the wants of first responders, essential infrastructure suppliers, and our armed forces. The market right here is important, the demand rising, and the constructive influence to enterprise and society huge.
Following the US overseas drone ban, his successor Rob Terra advised me one thing related: “The FCC decision doesn’t change Skydio’s strategy, it reinforces the direction the market was already heading, as America shifts from drones as toys and niche tools to operating as critical national infrastructure.”
He says that Skydio’s current enterprise will “demand our full attention for the foreseeable future.”

Among different the reason why Skydio would possibly favor serving the general public sector: at $10,999 and up for an enterprise Skydio X2 versus $1,099 for the patron Skydio 2, the corporate can construct drones that actually value 10 occasions extra — not counting Skydio’s cloud portal, autonomous docking station and different contract-based providers, a few of which might value $25,000 per 12 months per drone.
Skydio has by no means produced drones at shopper volumes, anyhow; it had shipped fewer than 50,000 drones in whole as of final March.
Few observe the drone business like Haye Kesteloo, editor-in-chief of DroneXL and former editor-in-chief of DroneDJ. He says nobody is coming to fill the United States’ DJI-shaped gap.
“What sets DJI apart is five things I haven’t seen any other company replicate,” he tells me, rattling them off one after one other: “Availability, capability, affordability, reliability, easy-to-fly.”
We focus on firm after firm, however he says he can’t consider a single startup that’s chasing good, reasonably priced shopper drones.
“The issue is that the financial incentives are much, much greater in the defense market and the first responder market than they are in the consumer market,” he tells me.
And that makes him fear concerning the future, he says, notably if provides of current DJI drones and their elements start to expire.

Image by Vjeran Pavic and Alex Castro / The Verge
“First responders, they’re using consumer drones for the most part. A lot of fire departments and search and rescue, those are volunteers with small budgets, so they’re not going to spend $50,000 on a Skydio program for a year. They’re going to buy two or maybe get gifted a handful of cheap consumer DJI drones, and those drones are going to be good enough to save people’s lives.”
“But that is all now going out the window,” he says.
Instead, most US drone startups are now chasing profitable protection contracts, together with $1.1 billion that the “Department of War” has allotted to jump-start “hundreds of thousands of weaponized, one way attack drones” by 2027. The US navy has seen what Ukraine has finished with small drones, and it desires a few of that.
Even corporations that had beforehand made consumer-grade merchandise have been absorbed into defense-contract chasing entities. Teal Drones, created by a teenage skilled drone racer, was just lately one of many corporations competing for a bit of the Department of War’s billion {dollars}, as a part of Red Cat, a holding firm that gives “advanced all-domain drone and robotic solutions for defense and national security.”
Meanwhile, shopper and FPV drone racing corporations Rotor Riot and Fat Shark are now a part of Unusual Machines, an organization that advertises itself as a made-in-USA part provider for small protection drones and options Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son, as a board member with hundreds of thousands of {dollars} in shares. Fat Shark’s web site hasn’t featured a brand new product since 2022. In its prospectus, Unusual Machines admits the “substantial majority” of Rotor Riot’s merchandise are Chinese and so is Fat Shark itself.

Is it attainable that protection business improvements may make for higher shopper drones sooner or later? “Absolutely,” says Moss. “Look at the advancements NASA and DoD have made in everything from Velcro to superglue.”
But Moss and Kesteloo each say a pivot gained’t occur anytime quickly.
“Maybe at some point if there is no war, they’re not burning through these drones and they need to increase their production, maybe they would pivot to the consumer market. But the financials need to be there to make that happen,” says Kesteloo.
“American companies can’t compete with Chinese companies, whether it’s a drone, a refrigerator, a microwave, we can’t compete in this country with the same level of labor cost,” says Moss.
Both say there’s no DJI substitute on the horizon.
“Everybody’s asking what else is out there, and the answer is, nothing,” says Moss. “I don’t know a single drone pilot, and I know a lot of them, who wouldn’t love to fly an American drone… but they’re not going after that 90 percent of the market.”
