
DJI Mini 2 SE
The DJI Mini 2 SE is DJI's most affordable entry-level drone: 249g, 4K/30fps, 31 minutes of flight time and 10 km range. Who it's for and what to expect.
Price (USD)
$299
Full Specifications
| Weight | 249 g |
| Flight Time | 31 min |
| Max Speed | 57.6 km/h |
| Camera | CMOS 1/2.3", 12 MP |
| Video | 4K/30fps, 2.7K/30fps, FHD/60fps |
| Obstacle Avoidance | None |
| Max Range | 10 km (FCC) |
| Wind Resistance | Level 5 (24 mph) |
| GPS | GPS + GLONASS |
| Dimensions | 138 × 81 × 58 mm (folded) |
The DJI Mini 2 SE holds the most accessible position in DJI's 2023 lineup at the magic 249-gram weight. It has no obstacle avoidance, no large sensor, no advanced tracking features — but it delivers the essentials for someone starting out: stabilized 4K camera, 31 minutes of flight time, and OcuSync 3 connectivity with 10 km range.
At $299, it's the entry point that makes drone flying genuinely accessible without compromising on the basics that matter. For anyone who has never flown a drone before and wants to try the hobby without spending $1,000, the Mini 2 SE is the correct starting point.
Camera: Honest 4K
The 1/2.3" CMOS sensor with 12 MP is smaller than what you'll find in the Mini 3 Pro or Mini 4 Pro. In good daylight, it produces sharp, usable 4K footage. In low light, expect visible noise — this isn't a sensor you'll push into sunset or indoor shoots.
The three-axis mechanical gimbal stabilizes footage even in moderate wind. QuickShots (Dronie, Helix, Rocket, Circle, Boomerang, Asteroid) are all present, providing automated cinematic moves without manual camera control.
What It Lacks
No obstacle avoidance means you're entirely responsible for not hitting things. For a beginner, this is the single most important limitation — budget extra practice time in open spaces before attempting complex shots near trees or buildings.
There's no ActiveTrack (subject following), no D-Log M profile, and no RAW video. Photos can be captured in RAW (DNG). The 1/2.3" sensor has noticeable quality limitations compared to the 1/1.3" sensors in higher-tier models.
Who It's For
The Mini 2 SE is for first-time buyers who want to start flying without a significant financial commitment, travelers who want a minimal-weight camera drone for social content, and photographers who fly occasionally and don't need obstacle avoidance or advanced tracking.
Those wanting obstacle avoidance should step up to the Mini 4 Pro ($959). Those who plan to fly regularly and create content seriously should also consider the Mini 4 Pro from the start — upgrading later costs more than buying right the first time.
Sources: DJI — Mini 2 SE specs