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How to Adjust White Balance on the DJI Neo 2

Peter Leslie

Peter Leslie

21 May 2026

4 min read
DJI Neo 2 camera view in DJI Fly with the white balance panel open and the Auto WB toggle visible

If the footage off your DJI Neo 2 keeps shifting colour mid-clip or the whites in the shot look too blue or too orange, the control you are looking for is the white balance setting. It lives inside the camera parameters panel on the right of the DJI Fly camera view, but it only becomes adjustable once the drone is in Pro mode.

Auto white balance is fine for the grab-and-fly stuff. Most drone pilots switch to a fixed preset or a custom Kelvin value the moment the lighting gets mixed, the shot needs to match another camera, or the colour on the live feed keeps drifting between frames.

Quick guide

To adjust white balance on the DJI Neo 2, go to DJI Fly → Camera View → switch to Pro mode → camera parameters panel → turn Auto WB off. Pick Sunny, Cloudy, Incandescent, or Fluorescent from the preset row, or drag the Kelvin slider for a custom value.

Step-by-step: How to Adjust White Balance on the DJI Neo 2

Follow these top to bottom the first time, and you will know the path off by heart the second time.

All steps performed and verified on DJI Fly app v1.21.2 as of 21 May 2026
1

Open DJI Fly and enter the DJI Neo 2 camera view

With the DJI Neo 2 powered on and the remote controller connected, launch DJI Fly and tap Go Fly to drop into the camera view. The live feed fills the screen with the shooting controls stacked in a column down the right-hand edge.

2

Switch the camera mode from Auto to Pro using the bottom-right icon

Tap the camera mode icon at the very foot of the right-hand control column. The label flips from Auto to Pro, and a new row of manual exposure controls appears above it. White balance is only adjustable from Pro, so this switch has to happen before the next step works.

3

Tap the camera parameters icon in the right-hand control column

The camera parameters icon is the one with the three short horizontal lines stacked on top of each other. Tap it once and a panel slides out from the right edge with the manual exposure rows on the left side and the white balance section grouped along the top.

4

Make sure the first section of the parameters panel is selected

The parameters panel is split into sections along the top edge. The first section holds the white balance controls — Auto WB, the preset row, and the Kelvin slider. If a different section is showing, tap the first tab on the panel header to bring the white balance group back into view.

5

Tap the Auto WB toggle to switch automatic white balance off

Auto WB sits at the top of the white balance section as a single toggle. Tap it once to switch it off. The preset row and the Kelvin slider below it light up and become tappable, where before they were greyed out.

6

Pick a preset from the white balance row — Sunny, Cloudy, Incandescent, or Fluorescent

Four preset buttons run across the row underneath the toggle. Sunny is the warmest of the daylight options, Cloudy adds a touch more warmth for overcast skies, Incandescent shifts the balance cool to counter the orange cast of indoor bulbs, and Fluorescent shifts it cool to counter the green cast of strip lighting. Tap whichever one matches the light the drone is flying in.

7

Drag the Kelvin slider for a custom colour temperature if no preset fits

The custom slider runs from roughly 2000 K at the warm end to 10000 K at the cool end. Drag the indicator left for warmer, right for cooler, in steps of around 100 K. The live feed updates as you drag, so you can settle on the exact value that makes the whites in the scene look neutral.

8

Confirm the live feed and close the parameters panel

Look at the camera view behind the panel — the whites in the frame should now read neutral, and the overall colour should match the scene the way your eye sees it. Tap anywhere outside the panel to close it. The white balance value sticks for the rest of the session until you change it again or power-cycle the drone.

Peter's tip

I almost never use the presets on the DJI Neo 2 — I jump straight to the Kelvin slider and set 5600 K for outdoor work, then nudge it warmer to 6200 K if the sky is heavy overcast. Locking a single Kelvin number across the whole shoot is what stops the colour drifting between clips when I come to grade, and it is the one habit that has made the biggest difference to how the Neo 2 footage cuts into the rest of the timeline.

Preset Approximate Kelvin When to pick it
Sunny ~5500 K Clear-sky daylight flying, direct sun on the subject, no significant cloud cover. The closest match for a clean midday shoot.
Cloudy ~6500 K Overcast skies, light haze, or any UK day where the sun is hidden behind cloud. Warms the image back up against the cool cast of grey light.
Incandescent ~3200 K Indoor flying under tungsten or halogen bulbs. Counters the warm orange cast that bulb-lit rooms add to the feed.
Fluorescent ~4000 K Indoor flying under strip lights, office lighting, or warehouse fluorescents. Counters the green cast that fluorescent tubes add to the image.
Custom Kelvin 2000 K – 10000 K Any scene where the presets miss — mixed lighting, sunrise, sunset, or any shoot where the Neo 2 has to match a fixed Kelvin value from another camera.

Frequently asked questions

Why is the white balance toggle greyed out on the DJI Neo 2?

The camera is in Auto mode. White balance can only be adjusted manually once the DJI Neo 2 is in Pro mode — Auto mode hides the Auto WB toggle and the preset row underneath it. Tap the camera mode icon at the bottom-right of the camera view to flip to Pro, then re-open the camera parameters panel and the toggle becomes active.

What white balance presets are available on the DJI Neo 2?

Four presets sit under the Auto WB toggle on the DJI Neo 2 — Sunny, Cloudy, Incandescent, and Fluorescent. Each one locks the white balance to a fixed colour temperature that matches the lighting conditions on the label. A custom Kelvin slider sits alongside the presets if none of the four match the scene you are filming.

What Kelvin range does the DJI Neo 2 white balance slider cover?

The custom slider runs roughly from 2000 K at the warm end to 10000 K at the cool end. Step values are coarse — around 100 K per increment — which is plenty for the matching work the Neo 2 is asked to do.

Does the DJI Neo 2 save the white balance setting between flights?

The value persists across the same session — closing and re-opening the camera view keeps the manual white balance where you set it. A full power-cycle of the drone resets the camera to Auto mode, which re-enables Auto WB, so you have to re-pick the preset or Kelvin value at the start of the next session.

Which white balance preset matches UK midday flying?

Sunny is the closest preset for clear-sky midday flying — it sits around 5500 K. UK weather rarely delivers a clean sunny day, so Cloudy at roughly 6500 K is the one most UK drone pilots reach for. If the sky is bright but overcast and Sunny looks too cool on the live feed, Cloudy will warm the image back up to a natural look.

Should I match white balance between the DJI Neo 2 and another camera on the same shoot?

Yes. Auto WB on the Neo 2 re-meters every frame, which means the colour shifts subtly as the drone moves between shaded and lit ground. If the Neo 2 footage has to cut into a sequence shot on another camera, set both cameras to the same Kelvin value — the DJI Neo 2 to a custom Kelvin on the slider, the other camera to the same number — and the cut will grade as one shot.

Why does the colour of the DJI Neo 2 footage shift mid-flight in Auto?

Auto white balance re-evaluates the scene every frame based on the dominant colours in the field of view. Fly from a green field over a tarmac road and the drone re-balances against the new dominant colour, so the image warms or cools mid-clip. Switching to a manual preset or a fixed Kelvin value locks the colour temperature and removes the shift.

Can I adjust white balance in photo mode on the DJI Neo 2?

Yes. The Auto WB toggle and the preset row work the same way whether the DJI Neo 2 is in photo mode or video mode — the panel layout and the menu path are identical. The only difference is that the value applies to the next still you capture rather than to the next clip you record.

Auto white balance is fine for the casual flights, but the second the footage has to grade as one shot or cut into a sequence from another camera, a fixed Kelvin value is the only setting that gets you there. Pick a number, lock it for the whole flight, and the colour stops fighting you in post.

If the white balance on the Neo 2 still will not settle the way you want, drop the details to peter@hiredronepilot.uk and I will come back to you directly. The video version of this walkthrough is on YouTube and the comments are open.

References

Primary source material for this article is the official DJI Neo 2 documentation and DJI Fly. External links open in a new tab.

Peter Leslie

Peter Leslie

Founder & GVC Drone Pilot

Peter is the founder of HireDronePilot. With thousands of logged commercial flight hours, he writes about drone technology, commercial surveying tactics, and UK aviation compliance.

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