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100 Startups to Watch in 2026

Over the last two years we have written about these startups, hosted them on the Resilience Conference stage, and spent many hours behind the scenes with their founders and investors.

Leslie HitchcockTobias StonebyLeslie HitchcockandTobias Stone
March 17, 2026
in News, Startups, Weekly Digest
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Defence has long been the domain of primes.

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The war in Ukraine has changed that by introducing the tech sector to defence. The battlefield is now about drones, autonomy, cheap attritable hardware instead of expensive, exquisite systems. It is about speed, price, and efficiency; about the cost per kill and how we increase lethality with limited defence budgets.

Any question about whether this is unique to Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine is being answered firmly in the Middle East, where cheap Iranian Shaheds are being shot down by expensive missiles and fighter jets. Western militaries are now turning to Ukraine for help, and the cost of sustained warfare is a focus that again points back to the need for cheap and rapidly iterated tech sector hardware over traditional platforms, which often take years and cost a fortune to bring into service.

Startups are proving to be more agile when it comes to addressing these new challenges, and their velocity is attracting both talent and investment to the sector. Startups are becoming scale-ups, and scale-ups are becoming companies valued in the billions of Euros. We have already seen exits and acquisitions at the end of that cycle.

Resilience Media tracks this ecosystem daily. We are at the heart of the discussions, watching the new funds as they are raised, and the new startups as they are founded and scaled. To help make sense of this rapidly growing space, we’ve created our list of 100 leading companies in defence tech. We say ‘companies’ because many of these startups are growing so fast that they are already evolving out of the scale-up phase into neo-primes and significant businesses. But we are calling the list 100 Startups, because startups are as much about attitude, speed, and risk as they are about size and valuation.

There are now thousands of defence and resilience startups, collectively raising many billions of Euros annually. This is not a comprehensive list; it is a curated list.

Methodology

Over the last two years we have written about these startups, hosted them on the Resilience Conference stage, and spent many hours behind the scenes with their founders and investors. We have also been polling our network extensively over the last few months to ask who they think matters. And our team has carried out independent research, including incorporating data from PitchBook, LinkedIn, Dealroom, Crunchbase, and other analytics firms.

Our hope is that this list is useful to inform the ecosystem, and in particular to help people new to defence to understand what this rapidly growing sector looks like.

If you have feedback, please get in touch. And now, we present the 100 Startups to Watch in 2026.

Tags: 100 startupsstartups
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Leslie Hitchcock

Leslie Hitchcock

Leslie Hitchcock is a seasoned media executive and co-founder of Resilience Media, an independent publication dedicated to the defence of democracy and the intersection of startups, security, and defence technology. With nearly two decades of experience in the tech industry, she has been instrumental in shaping conversations around innovation and resilience in the face of global challenges. Prior to founding Resilience Media, Leslie served as the Director of Events at TechCrunch, where she led the production of the renowned TechCrunch Disrupt conferences across major tech hubs including New York City, San Francisco, London, and Berlin, as well as a suite of events in Nairobi, Lagos, Seoul, and Tel Aviv. Her tenure at TechCrunch solidified her reputation for curating impactful events that bridge the gap between technology innovators and investors. In 2024, recognising the growing need for a dedicated platform to address the evolving landscape of defence and security, Leslie co-founded Resilience Media alongside Dr. Tobias Stone. The initiative was launched during the inaugural Resilience Conference in London, aiming to foster collaboration between the tech sector and national security communities. Resilience Media has since become a pivotal resource, offering in-depth analysis, founder profiles, and policy discussions pertinent to the defence tech ecosystem.

Tobias Stone

Tobias Stone

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Resilience Media is an independent publication covering the future of defence, security, and resilience. Our reporting focuses on emerging technologies, strategic threats, and the growing role of startups and investors in the defence of democracy.

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