- The Missile Defense Agency awarded Lockheed Martin a $407 million modification on May 7, 2026, for Aegis Guam System engineering and development through December 2029.
- The modification raises the total Aegis BMD Weapon Systems contract value from $1.528 billion to $1.935 billion, with work split between Moorestown, New Jersey and Guam.
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency has awarded Lockheed Martin a $407 million contract modification to continue engineering and development work on the Aegis Guam System, pushing the total value of the underlying Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Weapon Systems contract past $1.9 billion.
The modification covers work running through December 2029. Lockheed Martin’s Moorestown, New Jersey facility serves as the primary performance location, with additional work conducted in Guam itself — the island territory that the Aegis Guam System is specifically designed to defend. The Missile Defense Agency in Dahlgren, Virginia is the contracting activity managing the effort.
Aegis Guam is one of the most strategically significant missile defense projects currently underway in the U.S. military’s portfolio, and the scale of investment behind it reflects that priority. The system is designed to provide Guam with a persistent, layered ballistic missile defense capability drawing on the Aegis combat system architecture that the U.S. Navy has operated aboard surface warships for decades. Translating that shipboard capability into a land-based, fixed installation tailored to Guam’s specific geographic and threat environment is the engineering challenge at the core of this contract, and the work funded by this modification falls under the continuing effort to integrate air and missile defense capabilities into the Aegis BMD Weapon Systems design for the Guam installation.
Guam’s strategic importance to the United States is difficult to overstate. The island hosts Andersen Air Force Base and Naval Base Guam, two of the most significant American military installations in the Indo-Pacific, and serves as a critical hub for power projection, logistics, and command and control across a theater that stretches from Hawaii to the South China Sea. It also sits within range of ballistic missiles operated by both China and North Korea, making credible missile defense not a theoretical planning concern but an active operational requirement that Department of War planners have been working to address with increasing urgency as China’s missile inventory has expanded in both quantity and sophistication.
The Aegis combat system’s proven track record in the ballistic missile defense role gives the Guam installation a foundation of operational credibility that a purpose-built ground system would take years longer to establish. Aegis BMD has demonstrated intercept capability against short-, medium-, and intermediate-range ballistic missiles through a sustained testing and operational record aboard U.S. Navy cruisers and destroyers, and that capability baseline transfers to the land-based Aegis Ashore configuration that underpins the Guam system. The engineering and certification work funded by this modification is aimed at adapting and validating that capability for the specific conditions, threat vectors, and operational requirements of a fixed installation on Guam rather than a maneuvering warship.
A hybrid cost-plus-fixed-fee and cost-plus-incentive-fee arrangement is used when the government and contractor share cost risk — the cost-plus structure acknowledges that development and certification work of this nature involves technical unknowns that make firm-fixed pricing impractical, while the incentive-fee element creates a financial mechanism to reward Lockheed Martin for meeting cost and schedule targets. The $78.7 million obligated at the time of award, split between $76.2 million in fiscal 2026 research, development, test, and evaluation funds and $2.6 million in fiscal 2026 procurement funds, represents the immediate funding tranche against the $407 million total modification value, with remaining obligations expected to follow across the performance period through December 2029.

