$100 AI Upgrade Gives Ukrainian FPV Drones Last-Meter Accuracy in Heavy Jamming

Ukrainian first-person view (FPV) drones are reportedly hitting targets more accurately with a new AI-guided system that developers said can keep working even under heavy electronic warfare (EW). The device, called TFL-1, provides autonomous terminal guidance for the final 400 to 500 meters (1,312 to 1,640 feet) of a drone’s flight. It is built to […]

FBI Issues RFI for Fiber Optic Drones

The Bureau has  issued a request for information (RFI) from vendors who can provide it with fiber optic drones. Additionally, it is also seeking new radio-frequency-controlled drones. The “FBI is responsible for the investigation of a multitude of federal crimes,” the RFI states. “UAS are used in a variety of facets while responding, and on scene […]

Advanced Indigenous Drone Training in Canada

Canada’s future drone industry just gained a powerful new talent pipeline. The second cohort of the Rupertsland Emergency and Industry Skills Program (REISD), aka Métis Drone, has officially graduated at the nationally acclaimed Métis Crossing, marking another milestone in Indigenous-led innovation, advanced technology training, and economic development. Funded in partnership with Rupertsland Institute, the Otipemisiwak […]

Fractal Antenna Systems Introduces Acoustic Counter-Drone Tech

– Fractal Antenna Systems, Inc. through its OWL WORKS special projects team, has announced JERECHO, an acoustic array platform marking a significant advance in the strategic use of sound. Designed as a testbed for acoustic technology development and proof of concept fielding, JERECHO introduces new capabilities ranging from counter-drone detection and disruption to electronic spoofing, […]

Emirates SkyCargo Chooses LODD for Autonomous VTOL Drones

– Emirates SkyCargo has opened the door to using autonomous cargo aircraft in its operations, signing an agreement with Abu Dhabi-based LODD Autonomous to examine how heavy-lift drones could support the next phase of the UAE’s logistics sector. The memorandum of understanding, signed at the Dubai Airshow, brings together two very different but complementary parts […]

Zipline Expands Life-Saving Drone Delivery Network Across Africa with New U.S. Government Partnership

$150 Million from the State Department and Matching African Investments Could Triple Access to Essential Medicines Zipline will soon expand its medical drone delivery services across Africa through a landmark agreement with the U.S. Department of State. The expansion could help up to 130 million people gain rapid access to lifesaving blood and medicines. The […]

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Event Planners Highlight Shift to Drone Shows as Allentown Unveils NYE Plans

Event planners say drone shows are emerging as a popular option for communities seeking cleaner, quieter, and more modern ways to mark major holidays. This New Year’s Eve, Allentown, Pennsylvania, will debut its first drone light show, using a synchronized fleet of 200 illuminated drones to ring in 2026 instead of traditional fireworks. Officials describe […]

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SPH Engineering Adds 600 MHz UAV GPR Antennas for High-Resolution Subsurface Mapping

SPH Engineering has expanded its drone-based ground-penetrating radar (GPR) portfolio with two 600 MHz antennas designed for UAV integration: the MALÅ GeoDrone 600 and the Zond Aero 600 NG. The new systems are aimed at high-resolution subsurface mapping in engineering, utility detection, archaeology, environmental studies, and geophysical research, particularly where access for ground carts is […]

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Drone stocks in 2025: what $10.9 billion in market cap really means

Drone stocks in 2025 have hit a combined $10.9 billion in total market capitalization. That’s up $7.36 billion from last year. What should you invest in, if anything? And what does this mean for the drone industry going forward?

A new analysis by German drone analytics group Drone Industry Insights looked at 26 public drone companies. What it found was two things: 1. Genuine technology innovators are pulling away from the pack, and 2. Hype-driven business models are crashing back to Earth.

And despite the rising market cap, it’s looking like the market is seeing a correction. But it might not be a bad thing. In fact, that may be exactly what the drone industry needs.

Drone stocks in 2025: the clear winners

Next Vision Stabilized Systems from Israel now commands a $4+ billion market cap. That means this single company represents nearly 40% of the entire public drone market’s value. Next Vision Stabilized Systems doesn’t even make complete drones (they make gimbals and imaging systems).

This growth comes at the time we’re seeing ongoing DJI restrictions and a scramble for non-Chinese drone alternatives. People ask me all the time for recommendations of drone controllers, cameras or other parts made outside of China. Clearly, companies like Next Vision Stabilized Systems are seeing real market opportunities for companies offering critical enabling technologies.

Ondas Holdings (nearly $3 billion market cap) and Red Cat Holdings ($800 million market cap) are proving that diversification works. Both companies have moved beyond “we make drones” to building portfolios spanning automation, AI, hardware, software and services. Red Cat, which is based in San Juan, Puerto Rico, has particularly benefited from positioning itself as a U.S.-based alternative during the DJI uncertainty.

Drone stocks in 2025: the losers

The DII report doesn’t sugarcoat the failures of the drone industry (because yes, not every drone or AI company is a good investment). Arrive AI lost nearly $190 million in market value. IdeaForge dropped $117 million. Drone Destination shed $45 million.

These three companies do have some things in common. They’re either pure service plays or they’re assembling existing components without deep proprietary technology.

What’s the learning here based on the winners and losers? If you’re not bringing genuine technological innovation or defensible intellectual property, your premium valuation won’t last.

And sure, I love to cover the companies that provide end-to-end solutions, but the reality is the companies that make money aren’t quite as sexy. They’re the ones with industrial applications that hage clear ROI. Those matter more than flashy consumer concepts.

How M&A fits into the landscape

Rising market caps are fueling acquisition sprees. Ondas went on a buying binge in 2025, acquiring four companies. Much of that was enabled because of their higher stock price, which in turn strengthened their “currency” for deals. Meanwhile, Unusual Machines built out its FPV portfolio by acquiring Fat Shark and Rotor Riot.

This consolidation makes sense. In a market facing rapid regulatory changes — like the new Part 108 rules I’ve been analyzing — having multiple revenue streams provides crucial insulation against sector-specific shocks.

What the IPO pipeline looks like

XAG filed for an IPO on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in September 2025. That should be a crucial test for agricultural drone technology. Meanwhile, Skydio’s long-rumored IPO remains the most anticipated U.S. listing, particularly given the company’s strong position in enterprise and government markets.

And then there’s DJI. Would they even bother going public? They don’t need capital, they already control distribution and they’ve grown “organically” (with strategic Chinese government support, of course). An IPO would only create transparency requirements and shareholder pressures without obvious upside. (My take is that I doubt they would go public anytime soon.)

How drone companies should think about their position in the stock market in 2026

Drone investors now demand proven business models, recurring revenue and clear paths to profitability.

And look, that’s definitely not a bad thing. After all, the companies surviving this shakeout are the ones solving real problems, like industrial inspections, agricultural monitoring, defense applications. None of these big winners are the ones chasing consumer fantasies about pizza delivery drones.

If you’re tracking where the drone industry is actually headed rather than where the marketing decks say it’s going, follow the money. And right now, the money is flowing to companies that aren’t necessarily sexy. Instead, it’s flowing to companies that build the enabling technologies and that serve enterprise customers with quantifiable returns.

The drone market is maturing. That means fewer moonshots and more companies actually making money. I don’t hate it.

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Overcoming the Interference Barrier: vHive Enables Autonomous Tower Surveys on the DJI Matrice 4E

New interference-resilient capability restores true autonomy for telecom tower digitization vHive has announced exclusive support for fully autonomous tower surveys using the DJI Matrice 4E, marking a major step forward in overcoming radio-interference challenges at telecom sites. The company says its new capability resolves the long-standing issue that has limited the use of RTK-enabled drones […]

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