This drone can withstand a dunking in the sea – but might not survive the US government’s new rules

This drone can withstand a dunking in the sea – but might not survive the US government’s new rules

This drone can withstand a dunking in the sea – but might not survive the US government’s new rules


  • The HoverAir Aqua is due to ship from February 2026
  • FCC’s rules on foreign-made drones changed on December 23, 2025
  • Unapproved drones are effectively banned in US

At the tail end of last year, the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) added any foreign-made drone not already approved for sale to its “Covered List”, essentially banning all such future drones from sale.

Despite being informally dubbed the “DJI ban” by much of the world, this ruling applies to any non-US drone maker – a troubling reality that Zero Zero Robotics may be attempting to negotiate right now.

The Chinese company was poised to start shipping its highly anticipated HoverAir Aqua drone in February 2026. For the unversed, the Aqua is a unique camera drone in that it’s fully waterproof, and designed to autonomously fly alongside surfers, kayakers and water-skiers in order to capture their splashy escapades in a way that other drones just aren’t cut out for.

The self-flying HoverAir Aqua is designed primarily for watersports use. (Image credit: Zero Zero Robotics)

The Aqua raised over $2 million from over 1800 backers through an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign, but as it does not currently appear on the FCC’s list of approved devices, it seems destined to fall foul of the same rules which prohibit all future DJI drone releases for being sold in the US.

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