DJI has quietly expanded its list of products that are no longer getting official support — and it’s a long one. The company now counts 111 of its products that have either already reached end-of-service status or will hit that point soon.

Some of DJI’s most recognizable drones are on the chopping block. The Phantom 4 Advanced and Phantom 4 Pro stopped receiving support in June 2025. The 2017 Mavic Pro Platinum followed earlier this year, with support ending in April. And the original Mavic Air — the compact drone that helped push folding designs into the mainstream when it launched in 2018 — was officially cut off on January 1.
Those models join several well-loved classics that have already been retired: the first-gen Mavic Pro and the tiny DJI Spark lost support in October 2024, while even older Phantom 3 and early Phantom 4 variants were phased out way back in January 2023.
Next up: DJI’s enterprise lineup. The Matrice 200 V2 series — including the M200 V2, M210 V2, and M210 RTK V2 — will no longer be eligible for repairs or updates after the end of January 2026. DJI is warning owners to check their exact model so they’re not caught off guard.

Once a device lands on the suspension list, that’s it — no more repairs through official channels, no spare parts, no firmware updates, and no tech support. DJI says the move lets them focus more on newer tech and keep current-generation products better supported.
Still, the news stings for hobbyists and working pilots who rely on these older drones. Many of them remain perfectly airworthy, but with official support disappearing, their long-term survival becomes a bit more uncertain. It’s another reminder of how fast even high-end gadgets can reach the end of the line.
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(Source: DJI)







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