DJI Mavic 4 Pro
Omnidirectional obstacle avoidance with LiDAR means the drone navigates home safely even at dusk. APAS 6.0 actively reroutes around obstacles. Precision landing puts it within 0.3 meters of the takeoff pad.
At $2,199, RTH isn't the reason you buy this drone. It's a professional platform where RTH is one of many advanced features. But if RTH reliability during commercial operations is your top priority, the Air 3S is the next best, but lacks the Mavic 4 Pro's LiDAR precision landing (0.3m accuracy) and APAS 6.0 rerouting.
DJI Air 3S
Advanced RTH with omnidirectional obstacle avoidance at half the Mavic 4 Pro's price. The drone sees and avoids obstacles from every direction on its way home.
At $1,099, the Air 3S is the best RTH drone for most serious pilots. The 45-minute battery, 20km range, and intelligent return flight cover every realistic scenario. You'd need LiDAR for low-light RTH or triple cameras for professional video to justify stepping up to the Mavic 4 Pro.
DJI Mini 5 Pro
Smart RTH with tri-directional obstacle avoidance in a sub-250g body. The drone detects forward, backward, and downward obstacles during return flight.
At $773, it's the lightest drone with obstacle-aware RTH. The 1-inch sensor and 4K video make it a capable camera drone that also gets home safely. Grey-market import only for US buyers.
DJI Flip
Smart RTH with path tracing but no obstacle sensors. The drone retraces its outbound flight path, following a route that was already safe.
At $439, it's the most affordable DJI drone with intelligent RTH. Path tracing is a clever workaround for the missing obstacle sensors. The prop guards mean minor collisions during RTH don't result in a crash. Best for beginners who want reliable RTH without spending $700+.
Potensic Atom 2
GPS return-to-home with no obstacle avoidance. The drone climbs to RTH altitude and flies straight back.
At $299, RTH works and the 32-minute battery gives you margin before low-battery RTH triggers. Set the RTH altitude above obstacle height and it handles most situations. No geofencing means RTH isn't restricted in controlled airspace, which is both a feature and a responsibility.
DJI Neo
Basic GPS RTH on DJI's palm-sized selfie drone. Low-battery and signal-loss RTH both trigger reliably.
At $199, RTH is a safety net for a drone you're mostly flying close by. The Neo's short range means RTH flights are typically short distances, reducing the risk of obstacle collision during the return. It does what it needs to for its use case.
Potensic Atom SE
Basic GPS RTH with the same straight-line return behavior as the Atom 2. Position accuracy is slightly lower (3-4 meters) due to the older GPS module.
At $199, RTH works but with less precision than the Atom 2 or any DJI option. The EIS-only stabilization and 4K camera are adequate for casual use. The RTH feature means you won't lose the drone, which at this price point is the most important thing.