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Drones: Industry & Defence
18APR

DroneShield Opens Amsterdam HQ, Eyes EU Market

2 min read
13:54UTC

Europe is now DroneShield's largest market. The company is building sovereign manufacturing capacity before the contracts arrive.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Europe generates 45% of DroneShield's revenue, making sovereign EU manufacturing a commercial necessity.

DroneShield opened its European headquarters in Amsterdam on 30 March 2026 and confirmed EU manufacturing is underway, with first deliveries expected by mid-2026. European revenue reached $98 million in 2025, representing 45% of total company revenue. The EU pipeline stands at $1.2 billion as of February 2026. 1

The numbers reframe what was previously reported as a manufacturing expansion into something larger: Europe is already DroneShield's biggest market by revenue, not merely a growth region. The company posted 276% revenue growth in FY2025 and secured a $49.6 million European military contract that same year. Manufacturing capacity is scaling from $500 million to $2.4 billion annually by end-2026, a 4.8x expansion.

DroneShield's bet is that European defence procurement under ReArm Europe and Readiness 2030 will increasingly require locally manufactured systems. Geographic presence, not just technical performance, determines contract eligibility. For European militaries seeking counter-drone sovereignty outside the US supply chain, DroneShield is building the factory before the purchase order arrives.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

DroneShield makes equipment that detects and jams drones. It is an Australian company that has quietly become one of the largest counter-drone suppliers in Europe, generating 45 per cent of its revenue from European customers. Opening a European headquarters and manufacturing facility is a strategic move: European governments increasingly want to buy defence equipment made locally rather than imported. By building in Europe, DroneShield positions itself as a European supplier rather than an overseas vendor.

What could happen next?
  • DroneShield's local manufacturing will pressure US-based counter-drone vendors to establish European facilities or risk exclusion from ReArm Europe-funded procurement.

First Reported In

Update #4 · Factories Under Fire: America's Drone Gap Meets Reality

Breaking Defense· 4 Apr 2026
Read original
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Denmark (host nation)
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Russian Ministry of Defence
Russian Ministry of Defence
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Baltic NATO states (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania)
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Pentagon / Joint Interagency Task Force 401
Pentagon / Joint Interagency Task Force 401
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Ukrainian defence industry (Fire Point / Spetstechnoexport)
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