U.S. Army picks Overland AI for autonomous ground vehicles

Key Points
  • The U.S. Army awarded Overland AI a $2 million contract after xTechOverwatch to deliver autonomous ground vehicles to the 1st Cavalry Division for field use by active-duty troops.
  • The award reflects the U.S. Department of War’s effort to move autonomous ground systems from competitive trials into operational units for real-world evaluation and use.

The United States Army has awarded Overland AI a $2 million contract following the xTechOverwatch competition to deliver autonomous ground vehicles to troopers of the 1st Cavalry Division, the company confirmed in a public statement posted three days ago.

The award follows a series of soldier-run operational missions conducted under xTechOverwatch, a competitive Army program designed to evaluate autonomy systems under realistic field conditions. According to Overland AI, the competition required participants to operate across multiple missions designed and executed by active-duty soldiers, exposing systems that failed to perform reliably outside controlled environments.

As noted by the company, “xTechOverwatch exposed brittle technology by forcing the competition to operate across missions run by Soldiers.” Overland AI stated that it “welcomes this honest approach” and emphasized that there is no substitute for testing autonomy in real operational scenarios rather than laboratory settings.

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The contract will place Overland AI’s autonomous ground vehicles directly with 1st Cavalry Division units, allowing soldiers to operate and assess the systems in field conditions. The company said the award reflects continued Army investment in autonomy that has been “consistently proven in the field,” highlighting the service’s focus on practical, deployable systems rather than experimental prototypes.

xTechOverwatch is part of a broader U.S. Army effort to accelerate the transition of emerging technologies into operational use. Unlike traditional procurement pathways, the program emphasizes competitive demonstrations, soldier feedback, and rapid down-selection. Systems are judged not only on technical performance but also on reliability, ease of use, and mission relevance under stress.

Overland AI, which focuses on off-road autonomous navigation for ground vehicles, has positioned its technology around operating in GPS-denied and contested environments. The company’s platforms are designed to support logistics, resupply, and maneuver tasks without requiring continuous human control, reducing risk to soldiers while extending operational reach. The Army has increasingly prioritized such capabilities as part of its push toward distributed operations and reduced manpower exposure on the battlefield.

The 1st Cavalry Division, one of the Army’s most deployable armored formations, provides a demanding test environment for new ground systems. Operating across varied terrain and mission profiles, the division offers a practical setting to evaluate whether autonomous vehicles can keep pace with armored and mechanized units while maintaining reliability under field conditions.

According to Overland AI, the company was “born from competition and thrives under pressure,” framing the xTechOverwatch process as central to its development model. The firm credited repeated soldier-driven testing with helping refine its systems and identify weaknesses early, before wider deployment.

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