Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
UK Startups and Innovation
21MAY

Innovate UK opens £15m drone competitions

3 min read
10:13UTC

Innovate UK opened two defence-adjacent competitions on 5 May with a 3 June deadline: Counter UAS Technologies at up to £5m and Dual-Use Aviation Systems and Autonomy at up to £10m.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Innovate UK becomes the only UK defence-tech instrument writing confirmed cheques before June.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Innovate UK is the UK government agency that gives grants to companies developing new technologies. This week it opened two competitions specifically for defence-related technology with a 3 June deadline. The first, Counter UAS (Unmanned Aerial Systems), is about technology that can detect and stop drones; something that has become critically important after watching drone warfare in Ukraine. The second targets aviation systems built for both civilian and military use, focusing on autonomy and pilotless aircraft technology. Together these competitions offer £15m in grants to small and medium-sized businesses. The requirement that companies must work together in teams rather than applying alone is designed to build connections between small specialists who might be working on complementary pieces of the same problem.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The dual competition structure (Counter UAS at £5m, Dual-Use Aviation at £10m) reflects two distinct supply-chain gaps in the UK's defence SME base.

Counter UAS requires detection, tracking and defeat capabilities that are inherently dual-use: airport security, critical infrastructure protection and military applications overlap. UK SMEs in this space include Drone Defence and Blighter, but the competition is designed to expand the pool rather than re-fund existing players. The mandatory SME collaboration requirement is a gating mechanism to prevent large primes from capturing the small grants.

Dual-Use Aviation at £10m is a larger envelope targeting autonomy systems where the UK has competitive research programmes at Bristol, Cranfield and BAE's Advanced Air Mobility team, but limited commercial spinout history. The competition is effectively a first-use-case creation exercise for autonomy technologies that have been in university labs for years.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Sprint and Zig-Zag mechanisms launched six weeks ago have not published a first deployment; if the 3 June Counter UAS deadline produces winning consortia before Sprint has a working procurement pathway, the grants create pipeline without purchase commitments.

  • Opportunity

    Counter UAS grant winners with demonstrable field-deployment capability are positioned for the first Sprint leverage deployment, if DIAG targets the counter-drone pipeline as its first public case study.

First Reported In

Update #5 · State capital splits, allied money fills gap

nationalwealthfund.org.uk· 21 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS partner, Rowden Technologies)
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS partner, Rowden Technologies)
Rowden Technologies holds active AUKUS AI for Acoustics contracts with the UK, US and Australian defence establishments. The NWF's £25m investment in Rowden on 13 May places UK sovereign capital directly into a trilateral programme Australia co-funds; from Canberra's perspective, the NWF cheque increases UK government skin-in-the-game on a programme where Australia has already committed co-development resources.
Temasek (Singapore sovereign co-investor, Isomorphic Series B)
Temasek (Singapore sovereign co-investor, Isomorphic Series B)
Temasek co-invested with the SAIU in Isomorphic's $2.1bn Series B the previous week, treating a majority Alphabet-owned company as a valid sovereign co-investment target. Fractile's round, without a UK sovereign co-investor, reads differently from Singapore's vantage: allied state capital (NATO-IF, In-Q-Tel) is now competing with Asian sovereign funds for early positions in UK deeptech.
KfW IPEX-Bank (German state development bank)
KfW IPEX-Bank (German state development bank)
KfW's participation in the £250m InstaVolt facility alongside the NWF on 18 May is the first documented post-Brexit co-investment between a German state development bank and a UK sovereign vehicle on green infrastructure. It establishes a replicable bilateral instrument that neither government has publicised as policy, operating below the threshold of formal UK-EU financial cooperation.
In-Q-Tel / NATO Innovation Fund (allied national-security capital)
In-Q-Tel / NATO Innovation Fund (allied national-security capital)
Their joint appearance on Fractile's Series B, without any UK sovereign vehicle present, signals that allied national-security funds are moving faster into UK dual-use chip startups than UK state programmes. In-Q-Tel's Series B entry implies Fractile's SRAM in-memory compute is being read as a dual-use national-security capability.
DSIT / Liz Kendall (Secretary of State for Science)
DSIT / Liz Kendall (Secretary of State for Science)
Kendall launched the AI and Future of Work Unit on 18 May and framed the £36m DAWN investment as proof the government's compute infrastructure is operational. DSIT has not publicly addressed the absence of any UK sovereign vehicle on Fractile's cap table, or whether the AI Hardware Plan's first-customer pledge will reach companies already carrying NATO-IF and In-Q-Tel stakes.
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS AI for Acoustics partner)
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS AI for Acoustics partner)
Rowden Technologies holds active AUKUS AI for Acoustics contracts with the UK, US, and Australian defence establishments. The NWF's £25m investment in Rowden on 13 May brings UK sovereign capital directly into a trilateral programme, which from Canberra's perspective places additional UK government skin-in-the-game on a programme Australia co-funds and co-develops.