DJI RumorsDJI Rumors
  • Home
  • 2026 Tracker
  • Buyer's Guide
  • News
  • Blog
DJI Rumors

Breaking DJI rumors, leaked specs, and release dates. Track the latest on Avata 360, Mavic 4 Pro, Pocket 4, and upcoming DJI products.

Navigate

HomeBuyer's GuideNewsBlogSubmit a tip

Resources

2026 Product TrackerDJI Avata 360DJI Pocket 4DJI LitoUS Availability Guide

Stay Connected

Get notified when new drone intelligence breaks. No spam, just leaks.

About|Contact|Privacy Policy|Terms

© 2026 DJI Rumors. All rights reserved.

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Back to Blog
DJI Mavic 4 Pro: New Camera, Release Date, and Pricing Confirmed
ClassifiedFebruary 1, 2025

DJI Mavic 4 Pro: New Camera, Release Date, and Pricing Confirmed

LeaksDJI Mavic
Updated — June 2026: This article originally ran in early 2025 as a pre-launch leak roundup. The DJI Mavic 4 Pro is now a real, shipping product — it was unveiled on May 13, 2025. The confirmed specs landed close to the rumors: a 100MP triple-camera Hasselblad system, a 360-degree rotating "infinity" gimbal, 6K video, O4+ transmission and up to 51 minutes of flight time. Pricing starts around $2,699 for the drone with the DJI RC 2 in markets where it launched officially. In the United States it was never officially released and is gray-market import only (typically about $2,199 and up for the drone, more for combos), a situation made worse by DJI being added to the FCC Covered List in December 2025. We have rewritten the details below to reflect the launched reality.

The wait is over for drone enthusiasts. After months of leaks, the DJI Mavic 4 Pro is official — and it lives up to nearly all of the hype. DJI used the launch to push the boundaries of aerial photography once again, pairing a brand-new triple-camera Hasselblad system with a radical gimbal redesign. Here is everything we now know, confirmed.

Extended Flight Time and Enhanced Battery

One of the headline upgrades is endurance. DJI rates the Mavic 4 Pro at up to 51 minutes of flight time on a single battery — a meaningful jump over the Mavic 3 series and one of the longest figures of any consumer drone. Real-world reviews flying in 15–20 mph wind have reported around 43 minutes, roughly 85 percent of the rated number, which is excellent for the class. That headroom matters for professionals running detailed inspections, cinematic missions, or complex aerial surveys without constant battery swaps.

Redesigned Airframe for Superior Performance

The Mavic 4 Pro arrived with a redesigned airframe built around its new camera module. The body is engineered to accommodate a gimbal that rotates a full 360 degrees, and the aerodynamics were refined for stability at speed — reviewers have clocked it in the mid-50s mph range in real-world testing. The result is a drone that feels more capable and more agile than its predecessor, while staying in the familiar foldable Mavic form factor that both professionals and serious enthusiasts expect.

Revolutionary Camera System

At the heart of the Mavic 4 Pro is its confirmed three-camera Hasselblad system, with three focal lengths covering wide landscapes to tight detail:

  • Main camera: a 28mm-equivalent 100MP 4/3 CMOS Hasselblad sensor with a variable f/2 to f/11 aperture for strong low-light and depth-of-field control.
  • Medium tele: a 70mm-equivalent camera for natural compression and portraits of the landscape.
  • Tele: a 168mm-equivalent long lens for distant subjects and isolation.

On the video side, the main camera records up to 6K at 60fps, with the telephoto cameras shooting up to 4K at 120fps for slow motion. The system supports D-Log and 10-bit capture for professionals who grade their footage, and the variable f/2 aperture on the main lens delivers the improved low-light performance that the early leaks promised. Vertical shooting is supported for social platforms like Instagram and TikTok.

The 360-Degree Infinity Gimbal

The single biggest design story is the gimbal. The Mavic 4 Pro's camera sits in a sphere-style module that can rotate a full 360 degrees around the roll axis — DJI calls it the infinity gimbal. It also tilts far enough to point straight up, opening creative angles that simply were not possible on earlier Mavics, including true vertical compositions and rolling transitions without post-production tricks. Combined with enhanced omnidirectional obstacle sensing, it makes the drone both more cinematic and easier to fly safely.

Transmission and Control

The Mavic 4 Pro uses DJI's O4+ video transmission system, rated for roughly 30km of HD transmission range with a strong, low-latency live feed. It launched alongside the new DJI RC 2 controller, with a higher-end RC Pro 2 option featuring a large, bright rotating screen for the more demanding Creator combos.

Release Date and Pricing

DJI unveiled the Mavic 4 Pro on May 13, 2025. In the markets where it launched officially, pricing starts at around $2,699 for the drone with the DJI RC 2. Higher-tier Fly More and 512GB Creator combos — which add the RC Pro 2, extra batteries and a charging hub — run significantly more, into the $3,500–$4,600 range depending on configuration and region.

The US Situation: Gray-Market Only

Here is the important caveat for American buyers: the Mavic 4 Pro never officially launched in the United States. DJI did not list it on its US store, a casualty of the ongoing trade and regulatory standoff around Chinese-made drones. The only way to get one in the US has been through gray-market importers, with drone-only listings often around $2,199 and combos higher.

That route carries real risk. Gray-market units typically come with no DJI US warranty, may ship with region-locked firmware, and can be held or rejected at customs — the same border issues that affected other recent DJI models. The picture got more complicated in December 2025, when DJI was added to the FCC's Covered List. That move blocks new DJI drones from receiving the FCC authorization required for import and sale, though it does not make existing, lawfully obtained drones illegal to own or fly. Previously authorized stock can still be sold until depleted.

Final Thoughts

The DJI Mavic 4 Pro delivered on its promise as a genuine flagship: extended flight time, a redesigned airframe, the standout 360-degree infinity gimbal, and a 100MP triple-camera Hasselblad system that sets a new benchmark for consumer and prosumer drones alike. The catch for US pilots is not the hardware — it is access. With no official US launch and DJI now on the FCC Covered List, getting one stateside means navigating the gray market and its warranty, firmware, and customs trade-offs.

Have you flown the Mavic 4 Pro, or are you weighing a gray-market import? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below, and stay tuned for more DJI coverage.

Follow us on:

X: @djirumor
bsky.app: @djirumor.com

Related Articles

DJI Lito X1 & Lito 1 Leaked: Full Design Breakdown
Apr 21, 2026

DJI Lito X1 & Lito 1 Leaked: Full Design Breakdown

DJI launched the Lito 1 and Lito X1 on April 23, 2026 — the sub-250g pair that retires the Mini brand worldwide. Here’s the confirmed spec sheet, real pricing, and why neither drone is coming to the US.

DJIDJI LitoLeaks
DJI Osmo Pocket 4 Leaked Manual Reveals Massive Upgrade
Feb 28, 2026

DJI Osmo Pocket 4 Leaked Manual Reveals Massive Upgrade

The leaked manual was real. DJI launched the Osmo Pocket 4 globally on April 16, 2026 — 1-inch sensor, 14 stops of dynamic range, 10-bit D-Log, ~107GB onboard, from $499 — then revealed a dual-camera Pocket 4 Pro at Cannes on May 14. The catch: both are blocked from US sale under the FCC Covered List.

DJI Osmo PocketLeaks
🚀 Revolutionary Features of the Mavic 4 Pro
May 14, 2025

🚀 Revolutionary Features of the Mavic 4 Pro

A full breakdown of the DJI Mavic 4 Pro's confirmed features — 100MP Hasselblad triple camera, 360° Infinity Gimbal, 6K HDR video, LiDAR obstacle sensing — and how to buy it in the US, where it remains import-only.

DJI Mavic