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DJI Phantom 3 Advanced

 & Jim Fisher Principal Writer, Cameras

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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DJI Phantom 3 Advanced - DJI Phantom 3 Advanced
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The DJI Phantom 3 Advanced is one of the best drones on the market thanks to a bevy of features and 2.7K video recording.
Best Deal£329

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Pros & Cons

    • Easy to fly.
    • Very stable in the air.
    • Smooth video capture, even when in motion.
    • 20mm wide-angle lens.
    • 2.7K video.
    • Raw and JPG still capture.
    • High-quality Live View feed.
    • Built-in GPS.
    • Return-to-home function.
    • Automated flight modes.
    • No 4K support.
    • Limited battery life.
    • Wide-angle lens shows some edge distortion.

DJI Phantom 3 Advanced Specs

Dimensions 8 by 13.8 by 13.8 inches
Integrated Camera Integrated with Gimbal
Live Video Feed 720p
Media Format microSD
Media Format microSDHC
Media Format microSDXC
Megapixels 12
Remote Dedicated with App
Rotors 4
Video Resolution 1080p
Video Resolution 2.7K
Video Resolution 720p
Weight 2.8

DJI is leading the way in consumer drones, both in popularity and performance. The Phantom 3 Advanced ($999.99), the middle child in DJI's current generation of entry-level aircraft, is just as capable as its big brother, the Phantom 3 Professional ($709.00 at DJI) , in almost every regard. The only real difference is that the Professional captures video at up to 4K quality, while the Advanced is limited to 2.7K. The Professional is our Editors' Choice, but if you don't need to shoot at 4K (or if you want to spend a bit less), the Advanced is a fine alternative.

Design
The Phantom 3 Advanced ($559.00 at DJI)  is physically identical to the Phantom 3 Professional in almost every way. Only a small cosmetic change—the Advanced uses silver stickers on its propeller struts where the Professional has gold—separates the two.

In terms of features, the two drones are also twins. They're both flown using the same remote control and smartphone app, which now supports some automated flight features, including waypoint flying and automated return-to-home.

For information on what you can do with the Phantom 3 Advanced, as well as how it handles in flight, the app interface, and automated flight features, head over to our Phantom 3 Professional review. In testing we found that the two aircraft performed identically—the only difference is the maximum video resolution.

Video Quality
You can choose between MP4 and MOV file formats in the app, but there's no quality difference between the two. Video quality tops out at 2.7K (1520p), with 24fps, 25fps, and 30fps available. Dropping down to 1080p expands the frame rate options, adding 48fps, 50fps, and 60fps capture, and those capture rates are also available at 720p. It should be noted that you may have to update your firmware to gain access to 2.7K recording—when the Phantom 3 Advanced originally shipped it was limited to 1080p capture.

You don't hear a lot about 2.7K—4K gets all of the buzz, because that's what the latest televisions display—but it's a useful format. There's a definite resolution advantage when compared with 1080p, so you can capture video that will appear crisper when viewed on an HDTV, or can be cropped down to 1080p using editing software like Adobe Premiere Pro CC.

As for the actual quality of the video, it is a step behind the Phantom 3 Professional. It's not just because of the lower maximum resolution. The Professional encodes video at 60Mbps, while the Advanced is limited to 40Mbps. The end result is that you'll see some evidence of video compression in scenes with a lot of complex detail, and when moving the gimbal up and down. It's not a huge difference, and either aircraft is an absolutely huge upgrade from the 12Mbps footage captured by the older Phantom 2 Vision+ ( at Amazon) .

I noticed a bit of wobble in some of my shots, but wind was likely a factor there, as it wasn't noticeable when flying under calmer conditions. Overall, the gimbal does a solid job stabilizing aerial footage. Video is smooth, without evidence of jitters, even when making turns or changing elevation. It's like having access to a flying Steadicam.

You'll notice some horizontal lines running across the frame in some of our test footage. This isn't an effect that's limited to the P3 Advanced—you'll see it in other drones, including the Professional model, under the right conditions. It happens when the sun hits the lens (through the propeller motion) at the right angle. You can use a neutral density filter, like those available from PolarPro, to force a longer shutter speed and reduce the effect.

Still quality is identical to the Phantom 3 Professional—you can shoot solid Raw or JPG images at 12-megapixel resolution with a fixed 20mm (full-frame equivalent) field of view.

Conclusions
The DJI Phantom 3 Advanced is a very polished product. It's easy to fly, includes nice safety features, and captures smooth aerial video at 2.7K resolution. At just under $1,000 it's an attractive option, but budget shoppers may be drawn to the Phantom 3 Standard ($499.00 at DJI) , though the pre-production unit we flew suffered from a limited control range when flying in a suburban environment—a concern for backyard drone fliers.

Even though it's priced a few hundred dollars higher, the Phantom 3 Professional is still our Editors' Choice for consumer drones. The ability to record at 4K quality is a big plus, as the format is becoming more mainstream than niche. But if you're on a tighter budget, the Advanced is a fine second choice: it's one of the best drones out there right now.

Best Drone Picks

Further Reading

Final Thoughts

DJI Phantom 3 Advanced - DJI Phantom 3 Advanced

DJI Phantom 3 Advanced Review

4.0 Excellent

The DJI Phantom 3 Advanced is one of the best drones on the market thanks to a bevy of features and 2.7K video recording.

Get It Now
Best Deal£329

Buy It Now

£329

About Our Expert

Jim Fisher

Jim Fisher

Principal Writer, Cameras

My Experience

Images, and the devices that capture them, are my focus. I've covered cameras at PCMag for the past 14 years, which has given me a front row seat for the changeover from DSLRs to mirrorless cameras, the smartphone camera revolution, and the emergence of drones for aerial imaging. I have extensive experience with every major mirrorless and SLR system, and am also comfortable using point-and-shoot and action cameras. As a Part 107 Certified drone pilot, I’m licensed to fly unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) for commercial and editorial purposes, and am knowledgeable about federal rules and regulations regarding drones.

The Technology I Use

I use all of the major camera systems on a regular basis, swapping between Canon, Fujifilm, L-Mount, Micro Four Thirds, Nikon, and Sony systems. I still find time to use Leica M rangefinders and Pentax SLRs on occasion, too. I keep an iPhone 13 in my pocket for the rare occasions I'm not carrying a camera.

I'm not a brand-specific photographer. For product review photos, I swap between a Canon EOS R5 and a Sony a7R IV. I use Flashpoint and Godox TTL lights and Peak Design tripods, and I most often reach for a Think Tank or Peak Design backpack to carry equipment.

When it comes to computers, I'm an unapologetic Mac person and have been for the past 20 years. I write in Pages and use Numbers for spreadsheets. I currently swap between an Intel i9 MacBook Pro and an Apple Silicon Mac Studio for writing and use a calibrated BenQ 32.5-inch with the Studio for photo and video editing. I rely on a LaCie 6big RAID for media storage. I also keep a PC around for gaming, but please don't tell my Macs about it; they'll get jealous.

I split time between several different software apps depending on the type of editing I'm doing. For Raw image processing, Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic is my standard. I pair it with a LoupeDeck CT console to supplement my keyboard and trackpad, and I lean on RNI All Films 5 presets when I want to give an image a film look. I use Apple Final Cut Pro for video editing.

My first digital camera was the Canon PowerShot Elph S200, and my first DSLR was the Pentax *ist DL. I have a soft spot for antique film gear. I still use a 1950 vintage Rolleiflex Automat TLR and love trying mid-century Leica lenses on film and digital alike. I mainly use whatever's in front of me for review for digital snaps, but I pick up either my Leica M Typ 240 or Pentax K-3 III Monochrome when I want to step away from review work. In my downtime, I enjoy bird watching, reading, video games, and both good and bad movies, especially in the sci-fi and horror genres.

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