DEPLOY

Buying guide

Bayraktar TB2 vs DJI Mavic 4 Pro in 2026

Comparing 2 humanoid robots across availability, pricing, capabilities, and verified deployments. Current as of 2026.

Attribute
ManufacturerBaykarDJI
Form factoraerialaerial
Maturityproductionproduction
Availabilityinternal-onlyenterpriseshipping-nowshipping
PriceNot announcedNot announced
Capability claims
Brain
Verified deployments01DJI
Privacy practices
Sources on file65

Editorial summaries

Bayraktar TB2

The Bayraktar TB2, from Turkey's Baykar, is the internationally fielded legacy-prime armed UAV and a remotely-piloted, AI-augmented-not-autonomous platform. It is a medium-altitude armed drone with 20-plus hours of endurance, a 25,000-foot ceiling, a 150-kilogram payload, and Roketsan MAM laser-guided munitions, with triple-redundant flight control that automates taxi, takeoff, cruise, and landing while the mission itself remains operator-supervised. It is widely exported and combat-proven (Ukraine, Nagorno-Karabakh, the Libyan civil war, and others). The verified-vs-claimed nuance: Baykar's newer products (the Akinci HALE UCAV and the jet-powered Kizilelma) move toward greater autonomy, but the TB2 specifically is remotely-piloted, with a human operator supervising targeting and strike decisions. It is defense procurement; there is no consumer price. Specific export-country counts and engagement claims vary by source and defer to primary disclosures.

DJI Mavic 4 Pro

DJI's Mavic 4 Pro is the 2025 flagship consumer/prosumer camera drone (Hasselblad triple-camera gimbal, 360-degree rotation, extended range and flight time on OcuSync O4+), announced May 2025. Two verified-vs-claimed points define its consumer story. First, on availability: it is not officially sold in the United States at launch due to the US import/regulatory situation, and is available in Europe and other markets, so there is no official US consumer price on DEPLOY's record. Second, on autonomy: the Mavic 4 Pro is broadly autonomous-capable (subject tracking, obstacle sensing, return-to-home) but is typically operator-piloted, not a self-flying autonomous aircraft. Aggregator framing that calls consumer DJI drones 'autonomous' overstates the verification posture: the operating mode is operator-piloted with autonomy-assist features. It is at production maturity (shipping outside the US).


Machine-readable: this page as markdown.

← Back to all consumer robots