← Company intelligence

Robot maker · registered

Anduril Industries

Defense marketsecuritymarineCurated record

Anduril builds autonomous defense systems across air, undersea, and fixed-point sensor domains, unified by Lattice OS; an AI-native command-and-control platform that fuses data from distributed cameras, radars, and sensors into a 3D common operating picture and autonomously tasks, queues, and coordinates heterogeneous unmanned systems in real time. The hardware portfolio spans Ghost Group 3 short-range ISR/strike drones, Roadrunner/Roadrunner-M reusable turbojet autonomous interceptors (counter-UAS, cruise missile and aircraft defeat), Dive-LD long-endurance autonomous undersea vehicles, and the Sentry AI sensor tower for perimeter surveillance. Anduril doubled revenue to $2.2 billion in 2025 and holds a multi-program DoD presence spanning the US Marine Corps (Lattice/Sentry tower deployments at 4 Pacific/CONUS bases since 2019), the US Air Force collaborative combat aircraft program (January 2024), and a ~$250M Roadrunner-M supply contract with deliveries beginning 2024. Defense autonomous vehicles and vessels are eligible per registry criteria (Saronic/Frontline/Scout AI precedent).

HeadquartersCosta Mesa, US
Founded2017
Defense funding$11B
Team1000+
Deployments12
Open roles2163
01

Company overview

Identity and operating footprint

Company typeRobot maker
Market segmentDefense
StageSeries H
FoundersPalmer Luckey (Founder), Brian Schimpf (CEO, Co-Founder), Trae Stephens (Co-Founder), Matt Grim (Co-Founder), Joe Chen (Co-Founder)
Regions servedUS
Countries deployedNot listed
Service footprintNot listed
Last reviewed2026-07-05
MX

Robot models

Specifications remain vendor-claimed

Machinesecurity

ALTIUS-600

  • Tube-launched, multi-mission UAS; 3.5 kg launch weight; 4-hour endurance; 440 km range; modular payload supports ISR, electronic warfare, and kinetic strike configurations

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
  • Launchable from ground tubes, aircraft (MH-60, MQ-8), ships, and submarines; integrates with Lattice for autonomous networking and mission tasking

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

ALTIUS-700

  • Larger tube-launched UAS with 16 kg payload capacity; designed for carriage and release from larger aircraft and ground launchers; supports kinetic and non-kinetic mission payloads

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Anvil

  • Autonomous counter-UAS interceptor that defeats enemy drones through kinetic intercept; no explosive warhead — uses vehicle body as kinetic kill mechanism

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
  • Fully autonomous engagement: Lattice OS detects and classifies inbound UAS threat, cues Anvil launch, and guides the interceptor to kinetic defeat without operator-in-the-loop for each shot

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Anvil-M

  • Maritime variant of the Anvil counter-UAS interceptor; designed for ship-deck and coastal force protection against drone swarms

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Barracuda

  • Software-defined autonomous air vehicle; mission profile and payload reconfigurable via Lattice OS without hardware redesign; designed for high-volume attritable strike and ISR roles

    Vendor-described capability per Anduril's own framing of Barracuda as a software-defined autonomous vehicle

    Claim source
  • Jet-powered autonomous vehicle capable of high-subsonic speeds; designed to be produced at scale and expended on mission (attritable) rather than recovered

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machineamr

Barracuda-500M (SLB-500M)

  • No specifications on file.
Machinesecurity

Bolt

  • Small loitering sUAS optimized for rapid deployment and persistent area surveillance; backpackable form factor for dismounted infantry use

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Bolt-M

  • Munitions variant of Bolt; loitering sUAS with explosive payload for precision lethal engagement of point targets; operator-in-the-loop for terminal engagement authorization

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinemarine

Dive-LD

  • Long-duration autonomous undersea vehicle (AUV) capable of multi-month deployments; modular payload bay supports ISR, mine countermeasures, and undersea infrastructure survey missions

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
  • Powered by onboard energy systems enabling thousands of nautical miles of range; operates fully autonomously under Lattice command with no tether or real-time comms required during mission

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Fury

  • Autonomous air vehicle developed for the US Air Force Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program; designed to fly alongside crewed fighters as an autonomous wingman

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
  • Affordable, attritable design enabling mass production; software-defined mission sets allow rapid reconfiguration for air dominance, electronic warfare, and ISR roles without hardware changes

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Ghost Group 3 SUAS

  • Maximum flight time 100 minutes; cruise speed 52 knots (60 mph; 96 km/h); 35 lb (16 kg) payload capacity; 35-minute charge time; autonomous or remotely piloted with ML-based target identification and tracking

    Group 3 Small UAS per DoD classification: max gross takeoff weight ≤1,320 lb, max altitude ≤18,000 ft MSL; designed for persistent ISR and strike in contested environments

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Ghost-X

  • Group 3 sUAS with over-the-horizon range; purpose-built for autonomous ISR and strike in GPS-degraded and contested environments; integrates with Lattice for autonomous teaming

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
  • Designed to operate fully autonomously without GPS; onboard AI enables autonomous target identification, classification, and engagement decision support

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Roadrunner-M autonomous interceptor

  • Reusable twin-turbojet delta-wing autonomous air vehicle (~6 ft span); equipped with explosive warhead for terminal defeat of UAS, cruise missiles, and manned aircraft; operationally deployed for combat evaluation since January 2024; over 500 units in DoD supply deal

    Counter-small UAS (C-sUAS) and cruise missile defense interceptor; reusable unlike traditional single-use interceptor missiles; vehicle returns to base and relaunches

    Claim source
Machinesecurity

Sentry Tower

  • Autonomous surveillance tower integrating EO/IR cameras, radar, and RF sensors; Lattice AI autonomously detects, classifies, and tracks air and ground threats across a wide area without continuous operator attention

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
  • Deployed by US Marine Corps at 4 Pacific and CONUS bases since 2019 under a $13.5M USMC contract; also deployed on the US southern border for perimeter security

    Vendor-described capability

    Claim source
Machineamr

YFQ-44A Fury

  • No specifications on file.
DP

Deployment log

Announced and cited only

AnnouncedCustomerSiteCountryCountEvidence
2026-07-06Poland (PGZ / WZL-2)Not listedNot listedNot disclosedAnnouncement
2026-07-02US Northern Commandcounter-UAS defenseUS1Announcement
2026-06-18US Air Forceair forceUSNot disclosedAnnouncement
2026-06-17U.S. Air Force (Collaborative Combat Aircraft program, Increment 1)semi-autonomous drone wingman production (FQ-44A Fury)USNot disclosedAnnouncement
2026-05-12Ocean Power Technologiesmaritime surveillance (DHS/US Coast Guard demonstration)USNot disclosedAnnouncement
2026-05-05U.S. Space Force (SDA mesh networking, $100M modification)defenseUSNot disclosedAnnouncement
2026-03-01U.S. Army Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (Lattice C2 platform)defenseUSNot disclosedAnnouncement
2026-01-23US Marine Corpsmarine corpsUS600Announcement
2026-01-01Kuwait (Roadrunner-M + Anvil-K, FMS approval ~$1.98B)defenseKWNot disclosedAnnouncement
2025-09-10Royal Australian Navy (Ghost Shark XL-AUV program of record, A$1.7B)naval undersea fleetAUNot disclosedAnnouncement
2025-06-08Rheinmetall (Germany)Not listedNot listedNot disclosedAnnouncement
2025-03-06UK Ministry of Defence (Altius-600M/700M loitering munitions for Ukraine, ~GBP 30M via IFU)combat zoneUANot disclosedAnnouncement
CA

Funding history

Publicly announced rounds

Investors on recordFounders FundThrive CapitalAndreessen HorowitzSands CapitalValor Equity PartnersGeneral Catalyst
HR

Hiring signal

Public job board · 2026-07-13

Open roles2163

Hiring is an operating signal, not deployment evidence. Roles are refreshed from the company’s public careers system.

TL

Company timeline

Milestones and announcements

2026-05-13Raised $5B Series H at $61B valuation led by Thrive Capital and Andreessen Horowitz; disclosed 2025 revenue of $2.2B (2× year-on-year); total investor capital raised exceeds $11BTechCrunch
2024-01-01US Air Force selected Anduril (alongside four other contractors) for the Collaborative Combat Aircraft development program; Roadrunner autonomous interceptor entered operational combat evaluation; DoD awarded ~$250M Roadrunner-M supply contract with 2024 delivery startThe War Zone
2019-07-15US Marine Corps awarded $13.5M contract for Lattice AI command platform and Sentry sensor tower deployments at 4 bases: Camp Smedley D. Butler (Okinawa), Marine Corps Base Hawaii, MCAS Yuma (Arizona), and MCAS Iwakuni (Japan)Wikipedia
SC

Source ledger

29 unique public sources

01
Anduril raises $5B, doubles valuation to $61BTechCrunch · retrieved 2026-07-05
02
Anduril raises $2.5B at $30.5B valuation led by Founders FundTechCrunch · retrieved 2026-07-05
03
Anduril Industries Valued At $14B After $1.5B Series FCrunchbase News · retrieved 2026-07-05
04
Defense startup Anduril secures $1.5 billion investmentDefense News · retrieved 2026-07-05
05
Anduril raises $450M as the defense tech company's valuation soars to $4.6BTechCrunch · retrieved 2026-07-05
06
Anduril Raises $200 Million To Fund Ambitious Plans To Build A Defense Tech GiantForbes · retrieved 2026-07-05
07
Anduril Industries - WikipediaWikipedia · retrieved 2026-07-05
08
ALTIUS-600Anduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
09
ALTIUS-700Anduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
10
AnvilAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
11
BarracudaAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
12
BoltAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
13
Dive-LDAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
14
FuryAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
15
Ghost-XAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
16
Anduril's Roadrunner Drone Hunting Drone Gets Expanded Order From PentagonThe War Zone · retrieved 2026-07-05
17
Sentry TowerAnduril Industries · retrieved 2026-07-05
18
Anduril to Establish Barracuda-500M Cruise Missile Production Hub in PolandThe Defense Post · retrieved 2026-07-05
19
Anduril 250 deployed by USNorthernCmd for rapid deploymentAnduril Industries on X · retrieved 2026-07-05
20
US Air Force awards first CCA production contracts to General Atomics, AndurilDefense News · retrieved 2026-07-05
21
USAF Orders Both General Atomics' FQ-42 And Anduril's FQ-44 Into ProductionThe War Zone (TWZ) · retrieved 2026-07-05
22
Ocean Power Technologies 8-K 2026SEC EDGAR · retrieved 2026-07-05
23
Anduril Books $100M Space Force Contract Modification for SDA Mesh Networking WorkGovCon Wire · retrieved 2026-07-05
24
Anduril secures $87M contract for a common counter-unmanned C2 programDefense One · retrieved 2026-07-05
25
Inside Anduril's Bolt-M Kamikaze Drone ProgramThe War Zone · retrieved 2026-07-05
26
U.S. Approves $1.98 Billion Sale of Anduril AI-Powered Counter-Drone Systems to KuwaitThe Defense News · retrieved 2026-07-05
27
Equipping the Royal Australian Navy with next generation autonomous undersea vehiclesAustralian Department of Defence · retrieved 2026-07-05
28
As Fury production starts, Anduril pledging a different production approach at Arsenal-1Breaking Defense · retrieved 2026-07-05
29
Advanced attack drones for Ukraine in new deal struck by UK government and Anduril UKGOV.UK (UK Ministry of Defence) · retrieved 2026-07-05