European defense and dual-use technology has crossed from policy ambition into measurable capital deployment — and the window for founders, investors and partners to stake a position is open right now.
The macro opportunity is enormous
EU member state defense spending increased by over 30% between 2021 and 2024, reaching approximately €326 billion, a further increase of at least €100 billion is projected by 2027 — part of a broader effort to replenish depleted stockpiles, modernize aging platforms, and develop sovereign technological capabilities that reduce dependence on non-European supply chains. This wasn’t a one-cycle budget anomaly. It represents a structural reorientation of European fiscal policy.
But procurement figures alone understate the opportunity. Government spending on platforms, munitions and infrastructure is the foundation — the innovation layer on top, encompassing AI-enabled C2, autonomous systems, satellite constellations and cyber defence, is growing materially faster. C2 refers to weapon systems, networks and IT architectures that connects the weapons and personnel. The EDF’s €7.3 billion mandate for 2021–2027, ReArm Europe’s €800 billion framework and DIANA’s pan-NATO accelerator network all point to a system deliberately engineered to accelerate dual-use innovation from lab to deployed asset.
Cybersecurity is the fastest-growing sector — and structurally mandated
Cybersecurity is not just growing — it is being mandated into existence by European regulation. Germany leads the continent as the largest contributor, growing from 15.55 billion USD in 2026 to 26,23 billion USD in 203 at a 110,2% CAGR (Mordor Intelligence). NIS2 entered enforcement across EU member states in late 2024, and DORA came into force for the financial sector in January 2025. Non-compliance carries existential liability. Spending is not discretionary.
The particular pressure point is OT security — operational technology in automotive, machinery and critical infrastructure sectors where Germany’s industrial base is most exposed. Legacy SCADA systems, manufacturing control networks and logistics infrastructure are being retrofitted for cyber resilience at scale. Startups that can solve OT-specific threat detection, zero-trust architecture in constrained environments, or industrial incident response hold a structurally advantaged position.
The military cybersecurity sub-segment is a further accelerant. Germany’s Cyberagentur, the Bundeswehr CIHBw and the BSI are all actively funding dual-use cyber capabilities, and the EDF has earmarked over €40 million specifically for critical technologies, including cyber defence in its 2025 Work Programme alone.
AI in defense is at an inflection point
The global AI in defense market is forecast to expand from $8.5 billion in 2026 to $32.8 billion by 2031 — a compound annual growth rate of 30%. Among all global regions, Europe is projected to grow at the fastest rate, driven by EDF investment, DIANA programme output and accelerating Bundeswehr digitalisation.
The applications commanding the most investment are command-and-control software, ISR analytics, predictive logistics and autonomous decision-support systems. Each of these is a dual-use category — civilian applications in logistics, fleet management or industrial automation create the revenue base that funds the defence-specific capability layer.
Germany’s positioning here is particularly strong. German champion Helsing raised $487 million in a Series C led by General Catalyst last year. Alongside it, a cohort of Series A and B companies is emerging in signals intelligence, computer vision for aerial platforms, and LLM-powered operational planning tools. The civilian and defense AI opportunity are not separate markets — they are the same technology at different tolerance thresholds. The dual-use model is often the moat.
Venture activity has surged dramatically
Investment in European defense tech startups increased by more than 500% between 2021–2024 compared to the prior three-year period. In H1 2025 alone, VCs deployed €946 million into European defense startups — a 26% year-on-year increase that would have been unthinkable in the pre-Zeitenwende era.
The window is open — but navigation matters
The macro picture is compelling. But capital and market size are necessary, not sufficient conditions for a defensible venture. The founders who will capture disproportionate value from this cycle are those who can do three things simultaneously: construct an investable business model from credible technology, position it in the right sub-market with a bottom-up Total Addressable Market that survives LP scrutiny, and build the ecosystem relationships — that provide both the commercial proof point and the non-dilutive capital stack that compresses equity risk.
That is precisely the work Innovatrice does.
EDF: The European Defence Fund | FFG
EU Member States’ defence budgets | Epthinktank | European Parliament
Germany Cyber Security Market Report | Industry Analysis, Size & Growth Trends
€1 billion EU boost for European defence research – EUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politics
AI in Defense Market Trends, Growth & Insights: Forecast 2031
Defense and resilience tech reached an all-time high 10% of all VC funding in Europe | TechCrunch
