UK Announces Defence Investment Plan with Over $2.3 Billion Earmarked for Counter-Drone Systems
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has unveiled a new Defence Investment Plan allocating approximately £1.8 billion ($2.34 billion) to counter-UAS (C-UAS) systems. The plan covers a Digital Targeting Web, base protection at home and abroad, Royal Navy vessel defences, and expanded interceptor stockpiles. A separate commitment of over £5 billion ($6.5 billion) targets drone and autonomous weapons development, while nearly £2 billion will fund AI-driven targeting infrastructure.

Highlights
- UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's Defence Investment Plan allocates £1.8 billion ($2.34 billion) to counter-UAS (C-UAS) systems across four programme areas.
- Over £5 billion ($6.5 billion) is committed to drone and autonomous weapons development, including attack drones to operate alongside Apache helicopters.
- The Digital Targeting Web will receive nearly £2 billion in funding, with £790 million ($1.04 billion) specifically designated to counter air, drone, and missile threats using AI-driven software.
- An additional £11 billion has been announced to replenish UK weapons stockpiles, including low-cost cruise missiles and one-way attack drones.
- The UK government will build at least six new explosives and munitions factories by 2030 to boost national ammunition production capacity.
UK to Spend Over $2.3 Billion Bolstering Counter-Drone Defences
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has formally unveiled a new Defence Investment Plan that includes an estimated £1.8 billion (approximately $2.34 billion) in counter-UAS (C-UAS) spending. The funding spans C-UAS components within the new Digital Targeting Web programme, upgraded protection for domestic and overseas bases, new counter-drone defences aboard Royal Navy vessels, and expanded interceptor munitions and weapons stockpiles.
Over $6.5 Billion for Drones and Autonomous Weapons
The plan commits more than £5 billion (approximately $6.5 billion) to drone and autonomous weapons development, with counter-drone expenditure distributed across several programme lines.
For the British Army, the plan envisages attack drones operating alongside Apache helicopters, a new fleet of reconnaissance UAVs conducting intelligence-gathering and target-acquisition missions, and a significant increase in low-cost one-way attack drones, long-range missiles, armoured vehicles, and counter-drone defence systems.
Nearly £2 Billion for the Digital Targeting Web
The government will invest close to £2 billion (approximately $2.6 billion) to build the Digital Targeting Web, an AI-driven software platform that integrates sensors, commanders, and weapons systems to accelerate decision-making and shorten the time from target detection to engagement. Of this total, £790 million (approximately $1.04 billion) is specifically designated to counter aerial threats, missiles, and drones.
According to a Ministry of Defence statement, the £790 million investment will "enhance the protection of UK bases at home and overseas against air, drone, and missile threats," with funds directed towards new command-and-control centres, radar systems, and sensor networks.
The statement added: "We will also invest in Directed Energy Weapons, upgrade the Sea Viper air defence system on Type 45 destroyers, expand counter-drone systems, and establish a new integrated air, space, and missile defence operations centre."
At Least Six New Munitions Factories by 2030
On the weapons and munitions front, the government announced an additional £11 billion to replenish UK stockpiles and ensure forces have "the right mix of capabilities to strike a range of targets, including long-range strike weapons, low-cost cruise missiles, and one-way effectors."
"By 2030, we will establish at least six new explosives and munitions factories, substantially increasing the nation's ammunition production capacity," the statement said.
Editor's note: The $2.34 billion figure represents a conservative estimate of C-UAS-specific spending derived from the four programme areas described above.
Further Reading
- UK PM Speech Announcing the Defence Investment Plan (30 June 2026)
- UK GCAP Tempest Defence Investment Plan Coverage
Image credit: Royal Air Force
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