How to Recover Lost DJI Drone Footage (2025)
Lost your aerial footage after a crash or accidental format? This step-by-step guide covers DJI-specific recovery for 4K video and RAW photos.
DJI drones write video in real-time as they fly, which means any interruption β a crash, sudden power loss, or mid-flight card error β can leave your footage in a partially written, unplayable state. Standard recovery isnβt enough; you also need video repair.
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Power Off and Remove the MicroSD Immediately
Don't reconnect the drone to your phone or computer via USB. Remove the card directly. Every read/write cycle risks overwriting your footage.
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Use a USB 3.0 Card Reader β Not the Drone
Connecting via the drone adds an extra layer of firmware between your files and the recovery software. A direct card reader gives recovery tools raw access to the card sectors.
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Run a Deep Scan with Stellar
Stellar's deep scan mode searches raw sectors for MP4, MOV, and DNG file signatures β even if the card's file table is corrupted. This is the step most users skip and the one that matters most for drone footage.
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Use the Video Repair Module for Corrupted Files
After recovery, any file that won't play should be run through Stellar's Advanced Video Repair. It reconstructs the file header and audio-video sync, which is the exact failure mode of mid-flight crashes.
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Restore to an External Drive, Never the Same Card
Always recover to a different storage device. Saving back to the source card risks permanently overwriting files that haven't been recovered yet.
DJI File Formats: What to Look For
- .MP4 / .MOV β Standard video files. Stellar and EaseUS both handle these.
- .DNG β RAW still photos from Mavic and Phantom series. Stellar has dedicated DNG recovery.
- .SRT β Subtitle/telemetry files. Useful for confirming GPS data alongside footage.
- DCIM/DJI folder structure β DJI uses a specific folder hierarchy. If the folder structure is gone, deep scan by file signature is your best option.
When to Stop and Call a Professional
If the MicroSD card itself is physically damaged (bent contacts, cracked housing, or not detected by any reader), software recovery wonβt help. At that point, contact a professional data recovery lab β they can read damaged cards at the hardware level.