The Pentagon's Drone Dominance Gauntlet Stage 1 ran 8-20 June at Camp Grayling, Michigan, testing 49 companies and 79 drones before closing on 20 June 2026 1. The Gauntlet is a Pentagon procurement competition built to qualify drone manufacturers for large-volume attritable orders, the throwaway airframes meant to be fielded in bulk. About ten vendors per mission area are expected to advance to the second round, and Ukraine's Defense Drones Tech Corp competed as a returning Phase 1 winner. An initial batch of roughly 2,000 drones was accepted on the spot.
Advancing carries a heavy demand. Each Gauntlet II finalist must field 120 drones for orders of 4,000 to 9,500 units, under price ceilings of $5,500 for long-range and $4,500 for close-quarters airframes 2. A single winning lot is therefore worth more than $40 million, and qualifying turns a prototype shop into a volume manufacturer overnight. This beat advances the stage that opened on 8 June ; the new detail is the results and the component rule attached to the next round.
The component rule decides more than flight performance does. Motors and batteries from China, Russia, Iran or North Korea are barred, enforced through bill-of-materials review and physical inspection later this summer. Many FPV assemblers built their cost advantage on Chinese motors and cells, and a drone that flies well can still fail on a teardown. The contest is moving from who builds the best drone to who can prove where every part came from, a slower and more structural reordering of the supply base than any single award.
