SOF Week 2026: DroneShield Moves to Double Its Production Capacity in the US

SOF Week 2026: DroneShield Moves to Double Its Production Capacity in the US

Shephard Media
Shephard MediaMay 16, 2026

Companies Mentioned

Why It Matters

Domestic production strengthens U.S. supply‑chain resilience and accelerates delivery of critical C‑UAS capabilities to military and public‑safety customers, reinforcing national security amid rising drone threats.

Key Takeaways

  • DroneShield aims to double US production capacity within six‑nine months
  • Timeline cut from two years to four months earlier than planned
  • Expansion targets Pentagon Replicator 2 and Army JITF‑401 C‑UAS programs
  • Domestic assembly improves supply‑chain resilience and speeds customer response
  • Hiring surge supports growing demand from military, law‑enforcement, commercial markets

Pulse Analysis

The rapid proliferation of commercial and tactical drones has forced defense planners to prioritize counter‑drone (C‑UAS) solutions. In the wake of conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, adversaries have demonstrated the effectiveness of swarms and long‑range autonomous UAVs, prompting the U.S. Department of Defense to fund programs like Replicator 2 that fast‑track small‑UAS defenses. Companies such as DroneShield, a global leader in electronic warfare against drones, are now positioned to fill the gap between emerging threats and operational readiness.

By moving its production timeline up by several months, DroneShield is addressing a critical bottleneck in the defense industrial base: domestic manufacturing capacity. Accelerating the build‑out reduces reliance on overseas components, shortens lead times for high‑mix, low‑volume items, and aligns with the Pentagon’s push for supply‑chain resilience. The company’s hiring drive and investment in local assembly lines also signal confidence in sustained demand across military, law‑enforcement, and commercial sectors, where rapid fielding of handheld and fixed‑site systems is becoming a procurement priority.

Looking ahead, DroneShield’s focus on next‑generation capabilities, including swarm‑counter technologies, reflects a broader industry shift toward more sophisticated electronic warfare tools. As U.S. agencies continue to integrate C‑UAS assets into their defensive postures, vendors that can deliver scalable, domestically produced solutions will capture a larger share of a market projected to exceed $10 billion by 2030. The company’s showcase at SOF Week 2026 underscores its intent to lead the conversation on future‑proofing the nation’s airspace against evolving drone threats.

SOF Week 2026: DroneShield moves to double its production capacity in the US

Comments

Want to join the conversation?

Loading comments...