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UK Startups and Innovation
13MAY

MOD opens £20m fund to defence newcomers

3 min read
20:05UTC

The Ministry of Defence is offering accelerated contracts, not grants, to startups with no prior MOD experience. The unusual eligibility criterion aims to bring civilian dual-use tech into the defence pipeline.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The MOD is offering revenue contracts, not grants, to defence-tech newcomers with no clearance history.

The Ministry of Defence launched a £20m fund in January 2026 targeting startups with no prior MoD experience, an unusual eligibility criterion in a sector that typically requires existing security clearances and supply chain relationships 1. The fund offers accelerated contracts (revenue-generating, not grants) to fully or majority UK-owned businesses working in AI/ML, data science, robotics, autonomy, and precision weapons.

A new Office of Small Business Growth aims to reduce MoD procurement complexity. The fund sits alongside a £400m ringfence for novel technology and a broader £7.5bn SME spending target. A Dragon's Den-style pitch event connects funded startups with the Defence Investors' Advisory Group for private follow-on capital.

£20m is seed money for a procurement pipeline, not a venture fund in its own right. The signal matters more than the sum. The MoD is building a pathway for dual-use civilian tech companies to enter the defence supply chain, starting small and scaling through contracts rather than grants. For founders in AI and robotics, this is a new revenue channel with a buyer who has a £2.5bn additional SME budget to deploy by May 2028. The contract model (revenue from day one) is more attractive to early-stage companies than traditional grants, which require match funding and impose spending restrictions.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Ministry of Defence (MOD) has launched a £20m fund specifically for technology startups that have never worked with the military before. Usually, getting a government defence contract requires existing security clearances and a track record in defence, which most small companies do not have. This fund removes those barriers for startups working on AI, robotics, and autonomous systems. Instead of grants, it offers revenue-generating contracts: the MOD buys your technology. For a small startup, having the government as a paying customer can be more useful than investment, because it validates the product and generates income without requiring you to give up equity.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The eligibility criterion of "no prior MOD experience" is the structurally novel element. MOD procurement has historically required security clearances, supply chain accreditation, and demonstration of government-contract track record before any commercial engagement.

This created a catch-22 that excluded civilian AI and robotics companies. The new fund explicitly breaks this entry barrier, reflecting a recognition that the most relevant AI/ML capabilities are being developed in civilian markets and that the security clearance-first model is incompatible with dual-use technology adoption speed.

The £7.5bn SME spending target by 2028 is the broader context. The MOD has consistently under-delivered against its own SME spending targets (the 2021 target of 25% of defence spending via SMEs was not met). The £20m fund is partly a demonstration vehicle to show the procurement pathway exists before claiming the larger target is achievable.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    UK AI and robotics startups gain a non-dilutive revenue channel via MOD accelerated contracts for the first time, potentially replacing or deferring equity fundraising at early stage.

  • Risk

    MOD contract success may create path dependency: companies that optimise for defence procurement may find it harder to pivot to broader commercial markets, reducing their eventual exit options.

First Reported In

Update #1 · State capital floods in, seed money drains

Ministry of Defence· 13 Apr 2026
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