Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Photography
  5. Reviews

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

DJI Mavic 3 Classic review: the refined and affordable king of the skies

Add as a preferred source on Google
The DJI Mavic 3 Classic on a rocky beach.
Andy Zahn / Digital Trends
DJI Mavic 3 Classic
MSRP $1,600.00
“The DJI Mavic 3 Classic keeps almost everything that made the original Mavic 3 great, but at a much lower price point.”
Pros
  • The best camera on a consumer drone
  • Excellent performance
  • Bundled controller has a built-in screen
  • Bug-free and feature-complete user experience
Cons
  • No zoom lens

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

When the DJI Mavic 3 launched in 2021, it raised the bar for what a drone is capable of, but the problem was that it was priced to match its formidable aerial cinematography chops. Now, DJI has a way to address that problem.

Recommended Videos

The DJI Mavic 3 Classic brings this flagship line of drones back to Earth with a much more reasonable price tag. On paper, DJI has accomplished this without sacrificing the core capabilities of the original Mavic 3, but does this lofty goal jibe with reality?

DJI Mavic 3 Classic design

The DJI Mavic 3 Classic folded with straps.
Andy Zahn / Digital Trends

The Mavic 3 Classic is, as the name implies, classic. The Mavic line has inherited the crown of what a drone should be in the collective public consciousness, and the Classic fits that mold like a glove. Its four long arms fold snuggly in beside the chassis of the drone for easy transport. The large camera hangs on a three-axis gimbal beneath a wide forehead prow, and sensors are scattered all over the body of the drone. USB-C and microSD ports are located on the rear of the drone above the battery compartment.

DJI Mavic 3 Classic First Flight! Fall Colors at Lake Sacagawea

If you’re familiar with the Mavic 2 drone series, then you’ll find the design of the Mavic 3 Classic to be a significant improvement. You don’t have to unfold the arms to access ports, and the drone features a much better camera protector than other DJI drones.

Whereas other drones have a clip-on piece of plastic to protect the camera during transport, the Mavic 3 Classic features a strap-on hood that’s highly robust, easier to attach, and also protects the propellers. It’s not quite as nice as the one included with the original Mavic 3, but it does its job well.

DJI Mavic 3 Classic image quality

November Landscapes - DJI Mavic 3 Classic

The primary camera of the original DJI Mavic 3 offers the best image quality of any consumer-level drone, and the Mavic 3 Classic shares that same awesome Hasselblad camera with a Micro4/3 size sensor. It delivers both stunning 5.1K video and 20MP still images, plus it can shoot slow-motion video in 4K at up to 120 frames per second. This camera is so good that it can stand in for a high-end mirrorless camera like my Nikon Z 6 in a pinch.

Of course, some major sacrifice had to be made for DJI to be able to shave off such a big chunk of the price tag of the Classic. This drone only features one camera, whereas the original Mavic 3 has an additional super telephoto camera, which offers 7x magnification. I personally miss having access to that extreme zoom range, which is particularly useful for filming subjects such as wildlife from a safe distance. I also use the zoom camera to single out compositions from wide landscapes, such as distant mountains.

Mavic 3 vs Mavic 3 Classic: Crop vs Zoom

While the zoom camera of the original Mavic 3 is indeed awesome — and well worth the extra cash if you can afford it — the giant Hasselblad camera is certainly the more important of the two cameras. The zoom camera is certainly more niche, and if you had to give up something to cut the cost of the Mavic 3 down, it’s the obvious choice.

The Mavic 3 Classic can record video using a D-log color profile, as well as the capability to shoot still photos in RAW format. These options make for extra flexibility while editing in post-processing, and they allow the Classic to be considered as a serious professional photography and videography tool.

DJI Mavic 3 Classic performance

The DJI Mavic 3 Classic flying beneath a cloudy sky with trees.
Andy Zahn / Digital Trends

When I flew the original Mavic 3 at launch in 2021, it was a bit disappointing. That drone started out with buggy software and many missing features. Over the past year since then, numerous major updates have ironed out all the kinks and transformed the experience of shooting with that flagship drone, and the Mavic 3 Classic has benefited enormously from all that hard work done by DJI engineers. The Classic was easy to get up and running, and I’m pleased to report that I never encountered any bugs or performance issues in my time testing it.

The Mavic 3 Classic is a very quiet drone, particularly compared to the likes of the DJI Avata. Its large propellers help to reduce the noise it produces, making it more usable in areas where there’s the potential to bother other people.

Its large propellers help to reduce the noise it produces, making it more usable in areas where there’s the potential to bother other people.

In terms of battery life, you can expect roughly 46 minutes of flight time on a charge. This is enough to make the Mavic 3 Classic one of the few drones where carrying a single battery with you on an outing doesn’t feel like a severe limitation. It’s also capable of maintaining image transmission with the controller at up to 15km, which means a very reliable and strong signal for use at more reasonable distances.

The sensor array of the Mavic 3 Classic is highly advanced and is very good at tracking subjects and avoiding obstacles. I personally prefer to fly the drone myself and only utilize obstacle avoidance as a failsafe. However, there are numerous automatic modes available for getting specific shots. Also, as with most modern drones, the Mavic 3 Classic includes return-to-home capability, but as with all safety measures, it should be viewed as an emergency tool rather than as something to rely on.

In terms of speed and wind resistance, the Mavic 3 Classic really shows its worth. It can stand pretty extreme, gusty conditions up to 12 m/s, and can fly at speeds up to 21 m/s. This makes it usable in weather that I’d never dare fly other drones in, and it enables more dynamic, exciting shots than with other, slower drones.

DJI Mavic 3 Classic controller

The DJI Mavic 3 Classic controller.
Andy Zahn / Digital Trends

I tested the DJI Mavic 3 Classic with the DJI RC controller, which I praised in my review of the DJI Mini 3 Pro. It features a built-in screen, which I find to be far superior to the experience of flying with a controller that requires a phone or tablet to use as the screen.

DJI Mavic 3 Classic price and availability

The DJI Mavic 3 Classic fly more kit.
Andy Zahn / Digital Trends

The DJI Mavic 3 Classic starts at $1,470 for the drone only, meaning that if you already own a compatible controller, you don’t need to spend extra for a redundant controller. If you do need a new controller, the cheapest bundle is $1,600, which includes the DJI RC-N1 controller, though this does not have a built-in screen. You’ve got to pay another $150 to get the DJI RC controller with the screen, and I highly recommend that you choose that option over the more basic DJI RC-N1.

The optional Fly More Kit is available for an additional $650, which, while certainly steep, is nonetheless a smart purchase given the extra batteries, excellent carrying case, and other accessories it includes. I always end up purchasing the Fly More Kit when I buy a new DJI drone, as I always find myself in need of extra batteries anyway. However, given the long flight time per battery, you might be able to get away with fewer batteries than you would need to carry alongside other DJI drones.

The Mavic 3 Classic is certainly attractively priced given its capabilities, but if it’s still too far outside your budget, there are other great options available. The DJI Mini 3 Pro stands out in this regard, as it starts at $760 with a controller, and delivers very nice photo and video quality in a considerably smaller package than the Mavic 3 Classic. Alternatively, if you need a super-telephoto lens, the original Mavic 3 starts at $2,050.

The best drone in the skies, but now for less money

DJI Mavic 3 Classic flying in front of an old barn.
Andy Zahn / Digital Trends

For anyone who wanted a Mavic 3 but couldn’t quite stomach the high price tag, the DJI Mavic 3 Classic is the flagship DJI drone you’ve been waiting for. The only significant thing you’re giving up is super zoom capability, but that’s something of a niche feature on a drone, and many people considering a Mavic will be happy to exchange it for a significant savings.

Between its impressive performance, fantastic camera, bug-free software experience, and attractive price point, the Mavic 3 Classic deserves a place in the kit of any drone photography enthusiast.

Andy Zahn
Andy Zahn is a freelance writer and photographer living on a small farm in the shadow of Mt. St. Helens. He currently writes…
The iPhone Air shows why compact phones are still the better answer
Ultra-thin phones are cool, but compact phones solve the real problem
iPhone Air in hand

I get the appeal of super slim phones like the iPhone Air and Galaxy S25 Edge. The moment you pick them up, the device feels immediately distinct from a typical smartphone. The iPhone Air is ridiculously thin at 5.64mm, which weighs just 165 grams, and still gives you a reasonably large 6.5-inch OLED display with ProMotion.

For its size, Apple gets the comfort part right. Many smartphones in general are becoming tiring in a very specific way. They are either too tall, camera-heavy, or get too heavy to use for longer stretches with one hand. The iPhone Air manages to cut down on this fatigue by not only slimming down, but also shedding some of that weight.

Read more
The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide leaked in case listings, and the design shift is more dramatic than I expected
The Fold 8 Wide's case doesn't just hint at a wider phone. It hints at Samsung rethinking what a foldable is actually supposed to feel like to use.
Samsung Galaxy Z WideFold

Samsung’s purported Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide is still months away from its expected debut, but the phone’s case makers apparently couldn’t wait. 

Earlier today, trusted tipster Ice Universe (on X) posted pictures of third-party protective cases for the Fold 8 Wide, which are already listed on Alibaba (a Chinese e-commerce platform).

Read more
Fake stalking apps racked million of downloads. It says a lot about Google’s security and us
I Spy Podcast

There is no app that lets you pull up someone else's call history. There never has been, and there almost certainly never will be — carriers don't expose that data, and no third-party developer has the access required to retrieve it. This is not a grey area; it is simply not possible. And yet, 7.3 million people, according to welivesecurity have downloaded apps that claimed to do exactly that.

Security researchers at ESET spent months untangling a sprawling family of 28 fraudulent Android apps they collectively dubbed CallPhantom — apps that promised users a window into anyone's phone activity: call logs, SMS records, even WhatsApp history. Enter a number, pay a small fee, and the secrets of whoever you were looking up would supposedly come spilling out. What actually came out was fiction — random phone numbers dressed up with hardcoded names and timestamps, generated by the app itself, designed to look just convincing enough to seem real. The payoff is that users only saw this fake data after they'd already paid. That sequencing wasn't accidental.

Read more