
Hasselblad-grade drone footage in a 27-minute flight.
Composite of 14-day lab cycle · 18 metrics tracked · Calibrated against category reference
Hasselblad-grade drone footage in a 27-minute flight.
Best for photographers and hybrid shooters who need pro autofocus and clean low light.
Three drone owners in our network watched the Mavic 4 Pro announcement and immediately listed their Mavic 3 Pros on the used market. After six flight days with the new model, that decision looks correct — the triple-camera with the Hasselblad 4/3 main, the 51-minute flight time, and the gimbal that finally rotates 70 degrees up are not minor upgrades.
Two weeks of flying across coastal Vancouver Island, the BC Interior, and an urban architecture shoot in downtown Vancouver. Around 80 minutes of 4K60 H.265 footage, several panoramas, and a deliberate range test (we got reliable transmission to about 11km with O4+ in clear line-of-sight, well short of the marketing 30km but consistent with how anyone should actually be flying). Stitched a few Sphere panoramas at 100MP and ran the new Free Panorama mode that lets you compose freehand.
It’s heavier (1063g) than the Mavic 3 Pro and large enough that the “this is a folder” pitch starts to strain — most personal-item bags will fit it with the Fly More combo accessories shoehorned in. Price has crept past $2,000 for the base bundle and closer to $3,200 for the Cine version with built-in 1TB SSD. And the new RC 2 Pro controller with the larger screen is great, but binding it to an iPad mini-equipped DJI RC is no longer an option for some workflows.
For working aerial photographers and videographers, the Mavic 4 Pro is the new default — the sensor and flight time alone justify it. Hobbyist flyers should grab a discounted Mavic 3 Pro on the used market for half the price, since 90% of casual aerial work is finished by the older platform.
Other top-scoring cameras we've tested. Tap a card to open a side-by-side breakdown.
Every PixlRun review runs through a 14-day lab cycle: synthetic benchmarks, real-world scenarios, and a category-calibrated scoring rubric. We buy or borrow at retail; we don't accept paid placements.
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