DJI Launches Mic Mini 2 With Ten Faceplate Colors And A €33 Starting Price

DJI pushed the Mic Mini 2 live on its Hong Kong product page one week before the teased April 28 global reveal, confirming that the “More Than Sound” campaign is a second-generation wireless microphone, not an accessory refresh or a Mic 3 successor. The DJI listing is live with full specs, five configurations, and ten interchangeable magnetic faceplate colors. Notebookcheck flagged the early listing earlier today, and the Billbil-kun leak PC Guide published this morning lines up almost exactly with what DJI posted. So the pricing questions and the color questions are both settled.

What’s not settled is whether US buyers get any of this. The Mic Mini 2S variant that showed up in January FCC filings has already been pulled from the US database alongside the Osmo Pocket 4, which launched worldwide last week but skipped the US entirely. The Mic Mini 2 now looks like it could follow the same pattern.

Dji Launches Mic Mini 2 With Ten Faceplate Colors And A €33 Starting Price
Photo credit: DJI

The Answer On Colors Is Magnetic Faceplates, Not Colored Shells

DJI chose a middle path on the color question. The Mic Mini 2 transmitter ships in a neutral base shell, and the color comes from interchangeable magnetic faceplates that snap onto the front. Ten colors are available, from hot pink and yellow to lavender and teal. All retail bundles include two faceplates by default, one black and one white. The top-tier configuration includes all ten. The hardware stays consistent across SKUs, and creators swap faceplates on the fly depending on what they’re shooting.

Pricing Starts At €33 For A Standalone Transmitter

DJI offers five configurations at launch, and the pricing ladder is noticeably lower than the original Mic Mini. A standalone Mic Mini 2 transmitter costs €33. A basic kit with one transmitter and one receiver is €59. A mobile-oriented version with a transmitter, a mobile receiver, and a charging case also sits at €59. The mid-tier bundle with two transmitters, one mobile receiver, and a charging case is €79. The top-tier kit with two transmitters, a standard receiver, a charging case, and all ten faceplate colors lands at €99.

Compare that to the original Mic Mini’s November 2024 launch pricing: €59 for a single transmitter, €89 for a transmitter and receiver, and €169 for the full bundle. The Mic Mini 2 undercuts the original at every tier, most aggressively at the top end where €99 replaces €169. That’s a 41% drop on the headline SKU. DJI is positioning the Mic Mini 2 as the mass-market entry point below the Mic 3.

Dji Launches Mic Mini 2 With Ten Faceplate Colors And A €33 Starting Price
Photo credit: DJI

The Spec Sheet Keeps The Basics And Adds Three Voice Tone Presets

Audio-wise, the Mic Mini 2 carries forward the core specs of the original: 48 kHz 24-bit audio, automatic anti-clipping, and two-level noise cancellation. Battery life is unchanged at up to 11.5 hours for the transmitter and 10.5 hours for the receiver, extending to 48 hours total with a fully charged case.

The meaningful addition is three voice tone presets: Normal, Bright, and Rich. Bright emphasizes higher frequencies for a sharper vocal sound. Rich pushes lower frequencies for warmer tones. This is DJI’s answer to the in-app EQ features Hollyland and Rode have been shipping for a year. It’s not 32-bit float internal recording, which remains a Mic 3 exclusive, but it’s real audio functionality for creators who don’t want to EQ in post. Two of the five SKUs swap the standard receiver for a new “mobile receiver” aimed at smartphone-first vertical workflows.

DroneXL’s Take

DJI is done positioning the Mic Mini as a stripped-down Mic 2. The Mic Mini 2 is a lifestyle product, and the pricing, the faceplates, and the mobile-first receiver SKU all point the same direction. Look at who actually buys a €33 to €99 wireless mic. It’s not documentary shooters. It’s TikTok creators, small business owners filming phone content, travel vloggers, and teenagers who picked up a Pocket 4 last week. Those buyers care what the mic looks like on camera. They’ll pay €10 for a pink faceplate and another €10 for yellow six months later.

That’s the business DJI is quietly scaling into. The Mic 3 stays the pro audio product with 32-bit float and the four-transmitter receiver. The Mic Mini 2 becomes the volume product, and volume products need personality. I’ve been tracking DJI’s audio push since the original Mic Mini leaks surfaced in October 2024, and the price curve here is the steepest downward move I’ve seen from DJI in any accessory category. The 41% price cut on the top-tier bundle is the real story buried under the color news. DJI is fighting Hollyland’s Lark M2, Rode’s Wireless Micro, Insta360’s Mic Air, and a growing pile of €25 Amazon knockoffs. Cutting the headline SKU from €169 to €99 while adding EQ presets is how you defend a category you already own.

The US picture is the ugly subplot. The Mic Mini 2S got pulled from the FCC database. The standard Mic Mini 2 isn’t on DJI’s US store yet, and given how the Osmo Pocket 4 rollout went, I wouldn’t bet on it appearing any time soon. A $40 microphone getting caught up in a national security framework designed for drones would be the most absurd example yet of the post-Covered List enforcement pattern DroneXL has tracked since December. By Q3 2026, expect the Mic Mini 2 to be a gray-market import in the US, bought through European Amazon storefronts the same way Pocket 4 buyers are already working around the block.

DroneXL uses automated tools to support research and source retrieval. All reporting and editorial perspectives are by Rafa Suarez.


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Rafael Suárez
Rafael Suárez

Dad. Drone lover. Dog Lover. Hot Dog Lover. Youtuber. World citizen residing in Ecuador. Started shooting film in 1998, digital in 2005, and flying drones in 2016. Commercial Videographer for brands like Porsche, BMW, and Mini Cooper. Documentary Filmmaker and Advocate of flysafe mentality from his YouTube channel . It was because of a Drone that I knew I love making movies.

"I love everything that flies, except flies"

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