Army hands Anduril a $20B enterprise vehicle, opening with a counter-drone order
A 10-year IDIQ folds 120+ prior contracts into one platform — a startup edging into prime territory
Summary
The US Army has awarded Anduril a 10-year enterprise contract vehicle worth up to $20B, structured as a firm-fixed-price IDIQ (5-year base + 5-year option) that folds 120+ prior Anduril contracts into a single ordering platform built around its AI Lattice suite. It is not direct funding but an "ordering guide" — the Army issues task orders as money is allocated. The first task order, $87M, selects Lattice as JIATF 401's tactical Counter Uas command-and-control. The vehicle also covers Altius long-endurance UAVs, Ghost/Anvil counter-drone interceptors, Menace expeditionary C2 and Dive autonomous underwater vehicles. Analysts cast it as a turning point that lets a venture-backed firm displace traditional primes — while concentrating a decade of Counter Uas and battlefield AI spend, and dependence, in one vendor.
By the numbers
- $20B — ceiling of the 10-year enterprise vehicle (5-year base + 5-year option).
- 120+ — prior Anduril contracts consolidated into the platform.
- $87M — first task order (Lattice as JIATF 401 counter-drone C2).
- 5 — product lines covered: Lattice, Altius, Ghost/Anvil, Menace, Dive.
Why it matters
The award institutionalises counter-drone defence as a software-defined, AI-centric Army priority and tilts procurement toward defence-tech startups over the legacy primes. It also bets a decade of capability on one open-architecture vendor — a concentration and lock-in risk regulators and competitors are already flagging.
What to watch
- Task-order pace and how much of the $20B ceiling actually converts to obligations.
- Whether primes and rivals (RTX Coyote, Epirus) contest counter-UAS task orders.
- Integration of Lattice with the Army's ~$1B small counter-UAS buy and Replicator.