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Drones: Industry & Defence
30APR

Germany awards €840M+ across three drone makers

3 min read
09:10UTC

The Bundeswehr has now placed more than €840 million across three loitering-munition contracts since late February: Helsing's HX-2, Stark Defence's Virtus and Rheinmetall's FV-014. Rheinmetall is retooling a Neuss car plant to build them.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Rheinmetall has put auto-grade industrial capacity on a drone line, ending the prime-versus-startup framing in Germany.

Germany has now awarded more than €840 million across three loitering-munition contracts to three different industrial tiers since late February. Helsing booked an initial €270 million tranche for 4,300 HX-2 units inside a framework potentially worth €2 billion, which the Bundestag's budget committee cut from a €4.3 billion original ceiling. Stark Defence of Berlin won a parallel €270 million initial tranche for 2,200 Virtus units, a VTOL (vertical take-off and landing) loitering munition with a 130-kilometre range, 90-minute endurance and a reusable training mode 1. Rheinmetall disclosed on Wednesday 22 April that its FV-014 had taken a multi-billion-euro framework with an initial €300 million call-off for more than 10,000 units; production runs out of a converted Neuss auto plant, with deliveries from the first half of 2027 2.

The Bundeswehr has earmarked these systems primarily for the German brigade in Lithuania, a NATO Forward Land Forces commitment. That places German procurement across three industrial tiers in parallel: a venture-backed startup (Helsing), a Berlin mid-tier (Stark) and a heritage prime (Rheinmetall). Rheinmetall's award changes the German story most. Until late April, German drone procurement had been startup-led, and the policy debate assumed prime contractors would resist attritable economics. Rheinmetall converting an auto plant for 10,000-unit loitering-munition runs settles that assumption, and the cumulative German order book underwrote the cap table that priced Helsing at $18 billion .

All three programmes are manufactured inside the EU. The cumulative German commitment now sits at roughly the same scale as the UK's £752 million Berlin package for Ukraine, but routed through the Bundeswehr rather than as foreign military assistance, and on a fielding clock measured in months rather than years.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A loitering munition is a drone that flies to a target area, circles until it identifies what it is looking for, and then crashes into it, destroying itself and the target. Think of it as a guided bomb that can wait. Germany has just ordered more than €840 million worth of these from three different companies in a single quarter. One of the companies, Rheinmetall, has converted a car factory in Neuss to build them at scale. The drones are destined for the German troops stationed in Lithuania, where Germany has a permanent NATO base close to the Russian border. The three-company split means Germany is not depending on any single manufacturer to deliver on time.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Two structural conditions drove Germany to award contracts to three distinct industrial tiers rather than selecting a single prime. First, Germany has no established national prime contractor for loitering munitions: Rheinmetall's traditional expertise is in armoured vehicles and ammunition, not airborne systems; Helsing and Stark are too young to absorb a 10,000-unit national contract without supply-chain risk. The three-way split hedges against any single failure.

Second, the Lithuanian brigade fielding clock drove a timeline that no single supplier could meet. Deliveries are needed within roughly 12 months across all three programmes; Rheinmetall's H1 2027 delivery date at 10,000-plus units, Helsing's 4,300 units and Stark's 2,200 units must all be in the field before the next NATO rotation cycle. Germany chose breadth of industrial coverage over depth of any single programme because the alternative was a capacity shortfall against a fixed date.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    Rheinmetall's Neuss conversion, combined with Helsing and Stark contracts, positions Germany as Europe's highest-capacity loitering-munition producer by volume; allied procurement offices may route orders through the Bundeswehr framework rather than running separate national competitions.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Operating three separate loitering-munition logistics and training chains in the Lithuanian brigade simultaneously increases sustainment complexity; if two of the three systems require different ground equipment, the field-support burden on a single brigade becomes unmanageable.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Rheinmetall accepting a €300 million drone call-off alongside its armoured-vehicle core business confirms heritage European primes have concluded that attritable drone production is not margin-dilutive at 10,000-unit scale.

    Medium term · Reported
First Reported In

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Rheinmetall AG· 21 May 2026
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