
Booz Allen Hamilton
US defence and intelligence management consulting firm; Golden Dome OTA awardee.
Last refreshed: 30 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
What specific capabilities is Booz Allen Hamilton providing to the Golden Dome space-based interceptor programme?
Timeline for Booz Allen Hamilton
Mentioned in: Anduril joins Golden Dome OTA pool
Drones: Industry & DefenceWhat does Booz Allen Hamilton do for the US military?
Is Booz Allen Hamilton a defence contractor?
What is Booz Allen Hamilton's role in the Golden Dome programme?
Background
Booz Allen Hamilton is one of the largest US management and technology consulting firms, with approximately 34,000 staff and annual revenue exceeding $10 billion. Roughly 95% of its revenue comes from US government clients, primarily the Department of Defense and the intelligence community. On 24 April 2026 the firm was named among eleven awardees of the US Space Force's $3.2 billion Other Transaction Authority pool for Golden Dome Space-Based Interceptor prototypes, alongside Anduril Industries, SpaceX, Lockheed Martin, and others.
Founded in 1914 and publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (ticker: BAH) since 2008, Booz Allen Hamilton provides strategy, analytics, digital, and engineering services across the US national security community. Its inclusion in the Golden Dome OTA pool reflects its systems integration and programme management capabilities rather than hardware manufacturing. The firm has a long history of embedding consultants within major acquisition programmes including signals intelligence, cyber operations, and now space-based missile defence.
Booz Allen Hamilton's position in the Golden Dome award pool matters because OTA contracts allow prototype awardees to convert to production vehicles without re-competing under Federal Acquisition Regulation rules. As a long-standing incumbent in DoD programme management, the firm is positioned to provide integration and analytical services across the other ten named awardees during the prototype phase, potentially deepening its presence in a contract pool that could grow well beyond the initial $3.2 billion if any prototype progresses to production.