The Best Drones for Photos and Video (2025)

If you’re an aspiring aerial photographer or videographer, drones are your ticket to the sky.

These cheap, lightweight marvels provide perspectives that you’d otherwise be able to re-create only with expensive equipment such as cranes or dollies, which is why they’ve become a staple of many online creators’ gear lists.

But you can find dozens of different models—sometimes even from a single brand—with various costs and benefits to sift through. After test-flying 36 drones, we’ve concluded that the DJI Air 3S is the best because it combines a high-quality main camera, a useful telephoto camera, and the latest autonomous technology in a light-enough and relatively affordable package.

Everything we recommend

Top pick

DJI Air 3S

The best drone for aerial photos and videos

This drone offers impressive value, combining the 360-degree obstacle avoidance of the more expensive DJI Mavic 3 Pro with two fantastic cameras.

Buying Options

$1,599 from Adorama(Fly More Combo w/ RC2)

$1,599 from DJI(Fly More Combo w/ RC2)

Upgrade pick

DJI Mavic 3 Pro

A drone with all the bells and whistles

If you want the best cameras in a drone, get this model. Its main camera has a larger sensor than that of our top pick, and it adds 70mm- and 166mm-equivalent lenses to capture more-distant subjects.

Buying Options

$3,399 from Amazon(Fly More Combo)

$3,000 from Best Buy(Fly More Combo)

Budget pick

DJI Mini 3

An impressive entry-level drone

This drone offers DJI’s autonomous features (minus obstacle avoidance) and a 4K camera that can shoot in portrait or landscape—all in a tiny package weighing less than 250 grams.

Buying Options

$419 from Amazon

$420 from Best Buy

Best for...

DJI Avata 2

Best for a first-time FPV flyer

Like other first-person-view (FPV) models, this drone trades obstacle avoidance and stability for more aggressive, immersive footage. But its software and hardware guardrails make it more beginner-friendly than most.

Buying Options

$1,199 from Amazon(Fly More Combo)

$1,399 from Walmart(Fly More Combo)

Best for...

Autel Robotics Evo Lite+

Best for someone who wants to avoid DJI

This easy-to-fly drone provides a 6K camera and 40 minutes of flight time, and unlike DJI drones, it has no known security concerns. But the video quality isn’t as crisp or as colorful.

Buying Options

$1,149 from Walmart

$1,149 from Adorama

  • Image quality

    We’ve made photos and videos with all 36 of the drones we’ve tested since 2016 and compared them each time to find the best results.

  • Obstacle avoidance

    We fly drones through trees and at other objects that can get in their way to see if the drones detect them and avoid crashing.

How we tested

Top pick

DJI Air 3S

The best drone for aerial photos and videos

This drone offers impressive value, combining the 360-degree obstacle avoidance of the more expensive DJI Mavic 3 Pro with two fantastic cameras.

Buying Options

$1,599 from Adorama(Fly More Combo w/ RC2)

$1,599 from DJI(Fly More Combo w/ RC2)

The DJI Air 3S is easy to fly, has an ample stated battery life of 45 minutes (backed up in our testing), and is equipped with two cameras, giving you options for more varied and interesting shots than its predecessor. We recommend buying the Air 3S as part of DJI’s Fly More Combo because it’s the only package that also includes the DJI RC 2 controller, which features a built-in screen and is a marked improvement over the standard controller’s reliance on your phone’s screen for live view.

Like the older Air 3, the Air 3S can sense and avoid obstacles approaching from all directions, but it adds a front-facing lidar sensor, making it better at avoiding obstacles in low-light situations. These new sensing abilities make the ActiveTrack feature, which directs the drone to autonomously follow and film a subject while also avoiding obstacles, easier to use in more situations.

It can hold its position steadily, even in moderate winds, so you can focus on your cinematography. And it can go with you almost anywhere: Measuring 8 by 3.5 by 3.25 inches folded and weighing roughly 1.5 pounds, the Air 3S fits well in most standard-size backpacks.

Upgrade pick

DJI Mavic 3 Pro

A drone with all the bells and whistles

If you want the best cameras in a drone, get this model. Its main camera has a larger sensor than that of our top pick, and it adds 70mm- and 166mm-equivalent lenses to capture more-distant subjects.

Buying Options

$3,399 from Amazon(Fly More Combo)

$3,000 from Best Buy(Fly More Combo)

The DJI Mavic 3 Pro takes many of the best features of the Air 3S and, for a little more than twice the price, ups the camera count to three. It not only offers a Hasselblad-branded 24mm-equivalent wide-angle lens with a Four Thirds sensor but also sports two telephoto lenses: a 70mm-equivalent with a 1/1.3-inch sensor and a 166mm-equivalent with a 1/2-inch sensor.

Thanks to the comparatively huge sensor on the main camera, the Mavic 3 Pro can capture more detail than our other picks and can do so in a much wider band of lighting conditions. As a result, it produces better images right out of the camera, and it gives editing software more data to work with to improve the images even further.

This model can capture vibrant, detailed still images with its three cameras, and its video—at up to 5.1K resolution—looks more color-accurate than footage from the competition. It also has a 43-minute battery life, which isn’t the longest we’ve ever seen in our tests (our top pick beats it by a bit) but comes pretty close.

Budget pick

DJI Mini 3

An impressive entry-level drone

This drone offers DJI’s autonomous features (minus obstacle avoidance) and a 4K camera that can shoot in portrait or landscape—all in a tiny package weighing less than 250 grams.

Buying Options

$419 from Amazon

$420 from Best Buy

If you’re just getting into drone photography, especially for personal use, the DJI Mini 3 is a fantastic starter package. Though it costs less than half as much as our top pick, it still offers a 4K camera, a long (38-minute) battery life, and a compact, lightweight build that just slides under the FAA’s 250-gram limit.

The Mini 3’s camera and sensor aren’t as high-quality as those of the Air 3S, but the f/1.7 aperture provides surprisingly good image quality in lower-light conditions.

This model also comes with all the important features you need from a video drone, such as image and flight stabilization, an included controller, and smart flight modes, in which the drone flies itself to easily capture cinematic shots. But it lacks the obstacle-avoidance sensors of more expensive models.

You have the option to extend the battery life to 51 minutes via DJI’s Intelligent Flight Battery Plus, but using that add-on makes the drone heavy enough that it would need to be registered with the FAA.

Best for...

DJI Avata 2

Best for a first-time FPV flyer

Like other first-person-view (FPV) models, this drone trades obstacle avoidance and stability for more aggressive, immersive footage. But its software and hardware guardrails make it more beginner-friendly than most.

Buying Options

$1,199 from Amazon(Fly More Combo)

$1,399 from Walmart(Fly More Combo)

All of our picks are capable of capturing good-looking, high-resolution aerial footage. But while the others focus on smooth cinematic shots of landscapes or sweeping vistas, the DJI Avata 2 is designed to emphasize speed and agility, creating footage that makes you feel as if you’re riding onboard.

This small, buzzy fighter jet—DJI’s third iteration of its first-person-view drone—finally puts the FPV format inside an easily accessible and relatively practical package. It’s equipped with a 1/1.3-inch sensor that shoots 4K footage at up to 100 frames per second, motors that can propel it at up to 27 meters per second (in contrast to the Air 3S and Mavic 3 Pro’s 21 meters per second), and a sturdy plastic shell that can handle a wide range of impacts when you inevitably run it into a tree or wall.

The Fly More Combo that we recommend includes an updated headset, three batteries good for roughly 20 minutes of flight time each, and a new, smaller version of the motion controller that launched with the original DJI FPV drone. This upgraded controller makes flying more intuitive for new pilots, but if you want to unlock the more aggressive manual control mode, you should also have DJI’s more traditional FPV Remote Controller 3.

Best for...

Autel Robotics Evo Lite+

Best for someone who wants to avoid DJI

This easy-to-fly drone provides a 6K camera and 40 minutes of flight time, and unlike DJI drones, it has no known security concerns. But the video quality isn’t as crisp or as colorful.

Buying Options

$1,149 from Walmart

$1,149 from Adorama

If you are avoiding the DJI brand due to security or human-rights concerns, or if you want a 6K camera, we recommend the Autel Robotics Evo Lite+.

This drone can fly for up to 40 minutes with autonomous options similar to those of DJI drones. And unlike the DJI Fly app, the Autel Sky app is available for direct download from the Google Play store.

However, we still prefer DJI drones for their value and image quality.

The Best Drones for Photos and Video (2025)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Sen. Emmett Berge

Last Updated:

Views: 6010

Rating: 5 / 5 (60 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Emmett Berge

Birthday: 1993-06-17

Address: 787 Elvis Divide, Port Brice, OH 24507-6802

Phone: +9779049645255

Job: Senior Healthcare Specialist

Hobby: Cycling, Model building, Kitesurfing, Origami, Lapidary, Dance, Basketball

Introduction: My name is Sen. Emmett Berge, I am a funny, vast, charming, courageous, enthusiastic, jolly, famous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.