Anduril's Arsenal-1 manufacturing facility in Columbus, Ohio will begin production "in a matter of days" — months ahead of its announced July 2026 opening 1. The 5-million-square-foot plant sits on a 500-acre site near Rickenbacker International Airport. A $310 million JobsOhio grant backs the project — the state's largest single incentive package — with 4,000 jobs promised 2.
The first product off the line: the YFQ-44A Fury, Anduril's entry in the Air Force's Collaborative Combat Aircraft competition. Jason Levin, Anduril's SVP of Engineering, said the facility will produce "YFQ-44s at rate, but also many other Anduril products" 3.
Anduril was founded in 2017. Nine years later, it is building out manufacturing floor space that exceeds most legacy defence contractors' individual plants. The acceleration from announced timeline to production suggests a company that has structured its build-out around speed — a contrast with the multi-year facility programmes typical of established primes. Ohio's $310 million incentive, its largest ever for a single employer, is one measure of how aggressively US states are competing for defence manufacturing capacity as Pentagon procurement shifts toward newer entrants.
The timing carries competitive weight. Anduril faces General Atomics and Northrop Grumman for the initial CCA production contract, with a decision expected this fiscal year. Having a factory producing Fury airframes before that decision is a manufacturing readiness demonstration that planned future capacity, however credible, cannot fully replicate.
