After launching in China at the end of October, the DJI Nu 2 is now available in most markets around the world. A notable exception is the US – all new DJI products leave the US due to current political and market conditions.
Here are the prices for each – note that the price in Canada is given in US dollars rather than CAD. We’re not sure if this is a typo or a blink and how we US users can get the NEO 2 (but you probably shouldn’t because there won’t be aftermarket support in the US).
| Digi No 2 | Price |
|---|---|
| Canada | 230 USD |
| Great Britain | GBP 210 |
| Europe | Euro 240 |
| Japan | JPY 38,400 |
| Australia | AUD 410 |
| New Zealand | AUD 440 |
Note that the above prices are for the drone only. The DJI No 2 is aimed at beginners or those who want to capture drone footage without the fuss – you can control it with gestures and/or a smartphone app.
However, it fully supports more advanced control methods—you can get the Fly more combo for $400/£350/€400, which includes an RC-N3 remote, two extra batteries and a charging hub for three batteries. There’s also the MotionFly Plus combo at £550/£510/€580, which includes a DJI Goggles N3 and RC Motion3 controller for FPV flights.

The DJI NEO 2 has multiple control options, ranging from gestures to FPV
In case you missed the original launch, here’s a review of the DJI No 2. It’s a lightweight drone at 151g (160g with the DJI No 2 digital transceiver), which is slightly higher than the original NEO’s 135g but still under the 250g limit.
It flies faster – up to 5m/s in sports mode compared to just 2m/s for the old one – and slightly longer (up to 19 minutes vs 18 minutes). It is also more resilient to wind with a level 5 rating (up to 10.7m/s) compared to level 4 (8m/s). And you get internal storage at 49 GB.

DJI No 2 features forward laser and an omni-directional vision system
A far more advanced sensor suite combines an omnidirectional vision system with a forward-facing laser, whereas the original NEO only had a downward-facing positioning system. It also enables Active Track (with a new cycling option).
The NEO 2 uses the same 1/2″ sensor as its predecessor but brings a wider f/2.2 lens (versus f/2.6). Even better, the single-axis gimbal was replaced by a more capable 2-axis mechanism (tilt and roll).

DJI NEO 2 Key Features
Video recording in vertical mode was upgraded to 4K 60fps (above 4K 30fps) and 2.7K 60fps (above 1080p 60fps) in horizontal mode. By default, the drone uses a Wi-Fi video transmission system, but you can equip it with DJI’s O4 system, which adds a few extra grams of weight. The Wi-Fi system has a range of up to 500 meters, the O4 system can go up to 10 km. Note that the transceiver is sold separately but includes the fly with more combos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mxwci-_uwc
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