Drone & Aerial Photography — 2026-04-20
DJI is preparing its most aggressive product launch of 2026, with four new products — including the confirmed **Lito drone** — rolling out this month, even as the Chinese manufacturer navigates an increasingly complex U.S. regulatory landscape. Meanwhile, the FCC has opened a major public comment period on spectrum, licensing, and drone industry reforms, signaling Washington's push for "American drone dominance" ahead of a 2027 policy cliff.
Drone & Aerial Photography — 2026-04-20
Gear News
DJI's Big April Push: Four Products, One Big Asterisk
DJI is staging what may be its most ambitious product rollout of 2026. Just days after unveiling the Avata 360, the company dropped four teaser videos with four distinct launch dates this month.

The lineup confirmed so far includes the DJI Lito drone and a new DJI Mic variant, with official teasers and launch dates now live.

The catch: the Lito has appeared in FCC filings, and analysts suggest it could be the last new DJI drone to reach the U.S. market — at least under current regulatory conditions.

Meanwhile, DJI is exhibiting at NAB Show 2026 (Booth C6719, Las Vegas Convention Center, April 19), showcasing its Ronin and Osmo product lines — even as Americans cannot purchase the newly announced Pocket 4.

The DJI Ban Complication Deepens
A new Pentagon memo is complicating any potential reversal of the DJI ban. The Department of Defense's latest communication suggests the U.S. government holds security-related information about DJI drones that has not been made public — throwing cold water on hopes of a near-term policy shift.

Regulation Watch
FCC Opens Comment Period on "American Drone Dominance"
The Federal Communications Commission published a formal notice in the Federal Register on April 16, 2026, seeking public comment on additional measures to advance what it calls "American drone dominance." The proceeding asks stakeholders to weigh in on spectrum access, licensing reforms, and how the FCC can better fulfill its public interest mandate for the drone industry.
A related FCC Public Notice (DA 26-314) had already asked the drone industry to address spectrum access gaps, licensing delays, and Counter-UAS legal barriers before a 2027 exemption cliff — underscoring the urgency of these reforms.
Key takeaway for pilots and manufacturers: The regulatory window is narrowing. Operators and companies who want to shape the next generation of U.S. drone rules should file comments now.
Shot of the Week
No verified aerial photography highlight with a confirmed post-April 13 date was available in this week's research results. If you have a stunning recent shot to share, tag us for next week's feature.
Coverage period: April 13–20, 2026. All sources verified within this window.
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