June 5, 2026
The FCCโ€™s foreign drone ban is here


The Federal Communications Commission has banned new drones made in foreign countries from being imported into the US unless the Department of Defense or the Department of Homeland Security recommends them. Mondayโ€™s action added drones to the FCCโ€™s Covered List, qualifying foreign-made drones and drone parts, like those from DJI, as communications equipment representing โ€œunacceptable risks to the national security of the United States and to the safety and security of U.S. persons.โ€

DJI is โ€œdisappointedโ€ by todayโ€™s action, Adam Welsh, DJIโ€™s head of global policy, says in a statement. โ€œWhile DJI was not singled out, no information has been released regarding what information was used by the Executive Branch in reaching its determination.โ€ Welsh adds that DJI โ€œremains committed to the U.S. marketโ€ and noted that existing products can continue operation as usual. Other items on the FCCโ€™s list include Kaspersky anti-virus software (added in 2024) and telecommunications equipment from Huawei and ZTE (added in 2021).

The FCC says it received a National Security Determination on December 21st from an interagency body saying that โ€œuncrewed aircraft systemsโ€ (UAS) and critical UAS components produced in a foreign country could โ€œenable persistent surveillance, data exfiltration, and destructive operations over U.S. territoryโ€ and that โ€œU.S. cybersecurity and criticalโ€‘infrastructure guidance has repeatedly highlighted how foreignโ€‘manufactured UAS can be used to harvest sensitive data, used to enable remote unauthorized access, or disabled at will via software updates.โ€

If you already own a drone made outside the US, you will still be able to use it, according to the FCCโ€™s fact sheet. Drones or drone components can be removed from the Covered List if the DoD or DHS โ€œmakes a specific determination to the FCCโ€ that it does not pose unacceptable risks.

โ€œUnmanned aircraft systems (UAS), also known as drones, offer the potential to enhance public safety as well as cement Americaโ€™s leadership in global innovation,โ€ FCC chairman Brendan Carr says.

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