DroneShield (ASX:DRO) filed its Q1 2026 Appendix 4C on Wednesday 22 April, reporting A$74 million in quarterly revenue, up 103% year on year, and A$24 million in operating cash inflow, the largest quarterly figure in company history 1. Software-as-a-service revenue (recurring subscription income, SaaS) reached A$5.4 million, up 217% year on year and 7% of the quarterly total against a stated 30% management target. Committed FY2026 revenue rose to A$154.8 million by 20 April, up from A$140 million on 8 April, A$14.8 million in new commitments inside twelve days.
At the Q1 run rate, full-year 2026 revenue tracks above A$296 million, a 37% uplift on the FY2025 total of A$216.5 million . The Appendix 4C is the formal quarterly result, A$11.4 million above the A$62.6 million pre-print first reported on 13 April , and arrives between the 8 April departure of founding CEO Oleg Vornik and Chairman Peter James and the annual general meeting on Friday 29 May. Hamish McLennan joins as independent director on Friday 1 May, then steps into the chair pending shareholder confirmation.
SaaS revenue at 7% of the total against a 30% target indicates the recurring-revenue strategy is in early execution rather than mid-cycle: management is selling installed counter-UAS hardware and beginning to layer monitoring, threat-update and analytics subscriptions on top. A 217% year-on-year SaaS jump from a small base implies absolute SaaS revenue near A$2 million in Q1 2025; reaching the 30% target by 2027 would require quarterly SaaS revenue near A$30 million, an order of magnitude above the current run rate. The 30% target is therefore aspirational rather than imminent, and the gap between targeted and realised SaaS share is the disclosure that will set proxy-adviser tone ahead of the AGM.
Angus Bean's performance-linked compensation package is the institutional stress test on Friday 29 May; the SaaS curve and the cash inflow are the numbers a sceptical proxy adviser will read against it. An alternative view: DroneShield's commercial momentum can absorb governance turbulence: a 103% revenue jump and a record cash quarter are not the operational footprint of a company in crisis. Whether Bean's package passes will signal whether shareholders separate operational performance from succession-planning concerns, or treat the two as one verdict.
