Innovate UK opened two defence-adjacent grant competitions on 5 May with a 3 June deadline: Counter UAS Technologies at up to £5m total with individual grants of £300,000 to £1.25m, and Dual-Use Aviation Systems and Autonomy at up to £10m 1. Both require SME-led collaboration. The Counter UAS competition covers detection, tracking and defeat of uncrewed aerial systems; Dual-Use Aviation covers civil-military aviation and autonomy. £15m of fresh defence-tech grant funding at the SME tier in a single window.
The Counter UAS and Dual-Use Aviation grants sit alongside the MOD's Sprint private-investment leverage mechanism and Zig-Zag secondment programme, both made permanent by Healey and Reeves in April , and the £20m accelerated contracts fund for startups with no prior MOD experience . Sprint and Zig-Zag have yet to publish a first deployment six weeks into operation. Innovate UK is therefore the only UK defence-tech instrument with a confirmed cheque schedule between now and June, and the grant range gives it a tighter fit with companies that cannot yet absorb a procurement contract.
The other context is the wider UK grant-award count, which fell to a 10-year low in 2025 even as the average grant size rose to £423,000 . Counter UAS and Dual-Use Aviation are evidence that Innovate UK's DARPA-style portfolio model is now writing larger, fewer cheques into politically prioritised sectors. CircuitHub's $28m round (event index 10) sits adjacent to the same SME pipeline: contract electronics manufacturing for self-driving, satellite and defence hardware is exactly the supplier base the Counter UAS competition assumes exists.
