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Tytan raises €30M for drone defence, sources say at a ~€150M valuation

AI-powered interceptors are the necessary B-side to the huge gains made in drone warfare

Ingrid LundenbyIngrid Lunden
February 24, 2026
in News
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Drones have quickly become a cornerstone of modern warfare, and so has building better tools for those times when drones are used by adversaries. Tytan Technologies, one of the defence tech startups building drone interceptors, is rising to that challenge, and today it’s announcing a Series A of €30 million ($35 million) to expand its business. Sources tell us the round values Tytan just over €150 million (likely around $180 million). 

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Munich-based Tytan said it will use the funding to help scale its manufacturing footprint across Germany and Ukraine, as well as other allied markets; to continue developing the next generation of its hardware, including missiles; and to continue building out its AI technology. Tytan’s system — comprised of software, ground stations and interceptor drones —  targets both UAVs used for reconnaissance and strike drones equipped with weapons. 

Tytan’s funding underscores the ongoing push from technology VCs to seek out and back an array of startups building for defence and related resilience categories. Tytan’s list includes defence-specific VCs alongside traditional tech VCs who are doing more in defence: German private equity firm Armira and the NATO Innovation Fund are co-leading the Series A, with previous backers Visionaries Club, OTB Ventures, Lakestar, Magnetic, D3 and 10x Group participating. Tytan had last raised funding in August 2025, but never disclosed the amount. Now it has confirmed it was €16 million, bringing the total raised now to €46 million.

The deal is significant also because of the climate right now in Europe.

Two weeks ago, at the Munich Security Conference, the overriding themes laid bare where Europe sees itself today geopolitically. The spectres of adversary states like Russia and China, but also the America-first stance of the US these days, are compelling countries to put more focus on their defence than they have since the Second World War. They are doing so at a time when warfare is evolving well beyond guns, tanks, bomber planes and lots of human troops. Meanwhile, Europe (like the rest of the world) is increasingly focused on how make their defences more “resilient”: not just stronger and more modern, but more sovereign and less dependent on third parties. 

Tytan essentially fits all of those briefs: it’s a company building defence technology against the threats of today and tomorrow, and it’s doing that on the ground in Europe. 

“Europe is entering a once-in-a-generation reset in how air defence is designed, produced and deployed,” said co-founders Balazs Nagy and Batuhan Yumurtaci in a statement. “This funding round is all about sustainably building the industrial and technological foundation for a sovereign, AI-enabled air defence architecture made in Europe for Europe.”

It is not the only defence tech startup coming out of an Eastern Flank country to be raising money right now. Frankenburg, a competitor to Tytan in the area of intercepting drones, today confirmed its latest fundraise, also coincidentally for €30 million. We broke the news several weeks ago that Frankenburg had raised funding, at a $400 million valuation.

Why interceptors?

The drone-heavy war in Ukraine and pernicious drone incursions in other parts of Europe have put a spotlight on building better drone defences, and Tytan has been in the eye of that storm. 

Along with Helsing, Stark, Auterion, ARX and many others, it’s been one of the defence tech companies out of Germany that has been very active in supporting Ukraine in its war against Russia. And as a company building AI-powered tooling, that experience is giving Tytan valuable data to improve its software systems as well as battle-test its hardware. It said today that it has supplied “thousands” of interceptor systems to militaries. 

Tytan has hit some other notable external milestones in the last several months. In October, it announced a partnership with US defence company Axon to develop “drone wall” technology; and in the same month it also revealed that it had signed a major deal with the German government, reportedly worth hundreds of millions of euros, to supply the Bundeswehr (Germany’s armed forces) with anti-drone kinetic defence systems. 

The initial agreement with the Bundeswehr covers only “class 2” drones weighing between 150 kg and 600 kg. It’s part of a broader push to bring more startup-built tech to the military in the country: other major deals include contracts with Stark and Helsing, due to be approved officially this week.

It’s not clear meanwhile what the status is of the Axon drone wall deal. Neither company is talking about that project much at the moment, and more generally drone wall investments and larger strategies by states are still in very early stages and undecided — including whether or not some countries even have the appetite for the investment that such a wall might need. 

But the presence of NATO in this round by way of NIF is a strong sign of how one approach is getting an endorsement.

“TYTAN’s air defence technology addresses an urgent capability gap for Ukraine and Allies alike, enabling them to defend their airspace, military bases and critical infrastructure against drone incursions cost-efficiently and at scale,” said Patrick Schneider-Sikorsky, a partner at NIF. “NIF is proud to partner with the TYTAN team to defend the airspace across the NATO Alliance.”

Tags: defence techDronesGermanyinterceptorsmunichTytanUkraine
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Ingrid Lunden

Ingrid Lunden

Ingrid is an editor and writer. Born in Moscow, brought up in the U.S. and now based out of London, from February 2012 to May 2025, she worked at leading technology publication TechCrunch, initially as a writer and eventually as one of TechCrunch’s managing editors, leading the company’s international editorial operation and working as part of TechCrunch’s senior leadership team. She speaks Russian, French and Spanish and takes a keen interest in the intersection of technology with geopolitics.

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