DroneShield Earnings Take Flight As Counter-Drone Demand Builds.
DroneShield Earnings Take Flight – DroneShield has reported strong first quarter 2026 results, underpinned by growing demand for counter-drone capabilities across defence, critical infrastructure and commercial environments.
The company recorded quarterly revenue of $A74.1 million for the period to 31 March 2026, up 121 per cent on the corresponding period, with customer cash receipts of $77.4 million. The result reflects continued delivery activity late in the quarter and an ongoing pipeline of smaller repeat and new orders.
DroneShield said the performance continues momentum established in 2025, with the business achieving its highest-ever quarterly customer receipts and its second-highest revenue result to date. SaaS revenue also increased, supported by a growing installed base of connected systems requiring ongoing software updates to respond to evolving drone threats.
The update comes amid increasing focus on drone mitigation as part of broader security and risk management strategies. The proliferation of low-cost unmanned aerial systems is creating new vulnerabilities across transport, energy, government and public environments, requiring detection, identification and response capabilities that can operate in real time.
During the quarter, DroneShield secured a range of contracts and partnerships, including selection for the LAND 156 LoE 3 panel and $21.7 million in western military contracts. The company also expanded its technology capability through a partnership with Origin Robotics focused on kinetic interceptors and extended radar interoperability with Robin Radar Systems.
DroneShield Earnings Take Flight
Geographically, DroneShield established a European headquarters and manufacturing capability to support regional growth and sovereign supply requirements, while also continuing collaboration with Australian government initiatives to accelerate counter-drone research.
DroneShield’s platform approach combines sensors, electronic countermeasures and software, with regular updates aimed at keeping pace with changes in drone technology and tactics. The company said all new products now incorporate one or more SaaS components, reflecting the need for continuous threat adaptation.
The company said it expects further installations over the coming months as projects progress, with additional sites and deployments under consideration.
Drone mitigation is increasingly being treated as a core element of modern security architecture, particularly in environments where traditional perimeter controls are ineffective against aerial threats. As deployments scale, integration with wider surveillance, access control and command platforms are expected to become a standard requirement – SEN tends to think the local market is running a bit behind the threat.
You can learn more about DroneShield here or read more SEN news here.
“DroneShield Earnings Take Flight As Counter-Drone Demand Builds.”









