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Anduril seeks new funding at $60B valuation according to TechCrunch, doubling from $30B in June 2025
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The round would come less than 9 months after closing $2.5B Series G with backing from Andreessen Horowitz and Thrive Capital
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Valuation jump reflects surging demand for autonomous defense systems as global military spending accelerates
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Deal would position Anduril as most valuable private defense contractor, rivaling established giants
Defense tech unicorn Anduril is hunting for new funding at a staggering $60 billion valuation – exactly double what investors paid just nine months ago. The move signals explosive confidence in AI-powered autonomous weapons systems as the Pentagon races to modernize its arsenal. If successful, this would mark one of the fastest valuation doublings for a late-stage startup and cement Anduril’s position as the most valuable private defense contractor in America.
Anduril Industries is swinging for the fences. The defense tech startup founded by Oculus creator Palmer Luckey is pursuing fresh capital at a $60 billion valuation, according to sources familiar with the matter speaking to TechCrunch. That’s a jaw-dropping 100% increase from the $30 billion price tag investors accepted during the company’s $2.5 billion Series G just last June.
The timing tells you everything about where defense tech stands right now. Nine months ago, Anduril was already the darling of Silicon Valley’s growing defense ecosystem. Today, it’s positioning itself as an existential threat to legacy contractors like Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman – companies that have dominated Pentagon procurement for decades but are struggling to match the speed of software-driven warfare.
Andreessen Horowitz and Thrive Capital, who led the Series G alongside Valor Equity Partners, understood what they were betting on: autonomous systems that can be deployed at scale for a fraction of traditional weapons costs. Anduril’s Lattice AI platform powers everything from surveillance towers at the U.S.-Mexico border to counter-drone systems protecting military bases. The company’s Ghost drones and Roadrunner interceptors represent a new paradigm – mass-producible, software-updateable weapons that improve through machine learning rather than multi-decade development cycles.
What’s changed since June? For starters, global defense budgets are surging. NATO countries committed to hitting 2% GDP spending targets, while tensions in Eastern Europe and the Indo-Pacific have accelerated demand for next-generation systems. The Pentagon’s Replicator initiative – aimed at deploying thousands of autonomous systems within two years – plays directly into Anduril’s wheelhouse.