Making a smaller, less feature-filled product that's cheaper can often lead to a lot of compromises, but there's also a chance of making something truly special (see: the Nintendo Switch Lite). DJI has done exactly that with its new Mavic Mini, which packs nearly all of what's great about the company's larger, more expensive drones into a palm-sized package.
The collapsible Mavic Mini is more impressive than DJI's previous effort at a tiny drone, the Spark, in nearly every way. The Spark made too many compromises in search of its diminutive form factor (and is still 50 grams heavier than the Mavic Mini and $100 more). To keep down the weight and price, the Mavic Mini makes only one major compromise: It can't shoot 4K video. It can shoot 2.7K video though, which is good enough for most of us, especially considering it manages to do it while weighing a mere half-pound (just slightly heavier than a phone).
The Mavic Mini is small, light, and very portable. It's the perfect drone for travel, even hiking or backpacking. The precise weight at takeoff is 249 grams. That's an important number in the drone world. The Federal Aviation Administration requires any "unmanned aerial vehicles" weighing from 250 grams to 55 pounds to be registered. This is a pretty painless process anyway, but the Mavic Mini is exempt.


