2025 Defense Tech Market Boom: How AI and Cybersecurity Startups Are Transforming Warfare
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The defense-tech sector—long viewed as reliant on government contracts—has recently surged in the venture market. Experts say the Russia‑Ukraine war, conflicts in the Middle East and the deepening U.S.-China strategic rivalry have rapidly changed the character of modern warfare.
Growth has accelerated. By 2025, venture investment in the global defense‑tech market is expected to reach 67 trillion KRW (about $50.3 billion), about four times the level in 2022 when the Russia‑Ukraine war began. The compound annual growth rate has averaged roughly 59%, four to five times the 10–15% pace seen around 2020. The number of defense‑tech startups has climbed rapidly as well: Crunchbase and other data show firms rising from about 1,500 in 2020 to roughly 5,000 in 2025. Founding activity in AI, drones and cybersecurity spiked after the Russia‑Ukraine war. The U.S. accounts for an estimated 45–50% of the market, Europe 25–30% and China 10–15%—with the United States dominant.
Why the boom? First, the tools of war have changed. Where tanks, fighters and aircraft carriers once defined advantage, today AI, drones, satellites and cybersecurity increasingly determine battlefield outcomes. In the Russia‑Ukraine conflict, inexpensive small drones costing a few million KRW (a few thousand USD) repeatedly disabled tanks and ships worth tens of billions KRW (tens of millions USD). That reality pushed the U.S. Department of Defense to prioritize low‑cost autonomous weapon systems, channeling investment toward startups with AI autonomy and drone expertise.
Second, big defense contractors struggle to match the pace of technological change. Traditional arms makers focus on large platforms and long development cycles, making rapid AI and software adaptation difficult. Startups, by contrast, apply AI, data analytics and drone technology to military problems far faster. Anduril’s autonomous surveillance systems are a leading example; they are already deployed along the U.S. southern border and at military bases. In short, tech startups are entering markets that once belonged almost exclusively to Lockheed Martin, Boeing and other prime contractors.
Third, national security is now national industrial policy. With U.S.-China strategic competition stretching out, countries treat semiconductors, AI, drones and cybersecurity as vital infrastructure—and governments are increasing investment. The Defense Innovation Unit’s budget for adopting commercial technology has grown at roughly 65% annually over the past five years. The European Union is also supporting defense innovation: the European Defence Fund plans €8 billion (roughly 12 trillion KRW (about $9.0 billion)) from 2021–2027 to back advanced defense technologies.
Which countries and firms lead? The market is U.S.-led. Silicon Valley companies such as Anduril, Palantir and Shield AI have scaled quickly on AI, drone and data capabilities. Palantir, in particular, supplies military intelligence and battlefield data software and has become a core AI platform for the U.S. military and NATO. In Europe, Germany’s data‑tech firm Helsing is notable; Israel’s NSO Group is known for cyber intelligence and surveillance tools; and China’s DJI remains the global market leader in commercial drones.
How many unicorns are there? The defense‑tech sector currently counts about 20 unicorns—far fewer than the hundreds in AI or fintech—but it’s notable that roughly half of those reached unicorn status last year alone. Leading names include Anduril (valued at about 85 trillion KRW (approximately $63.8 billion)), autonomous‑flight drone maker Shield AI (about 17 trillion KRW (approximately $12.8 billion)) and unmanned maritime/air/ground systems developer UFORCE (valued over $1 billion). Given South Korea’s world‑class capabilities in semiconductors, batteries, drones and robotics, now is the moment for both government and industry to increase investment in defense‑tech ventures.

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