Pentagon chooses MatrixSpace in counter-UAS program

Key Points
  • MatrixSpace was selected as the overall winner of the Defense Innovation Unit’s Counter-UAS Low-Cost Sensing Challenge after live testing during USNORTHCOM’s Falcon Peak 25.2 exercise.
  • The company’s radar-based system outperformed more than 115 submissions and earned a $500,000 award, with eligibility for follow-on contracts.

MatrixSpace announced today that it has been selected as the overall winner of the Defense Innovation Unit’s Counter-small Unmanned Aircraft System (C-sUAS) Low-Cost Sensing (LCS) Challenge, following live operational testing conducted during U.S. Northern Command’s Falcon Peak 25.2 exercise.

The selection places MatrixSpace at the top of more than 115 submissions evaluated by the Defense Innovation Unit in collaboration with U.S. Northern Command, Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, and U.S. Indo-Pacific Command.

As the top-performing solution, MatrixSpace will receive a $500,000 award. Guardian RF, Hidden Level, Inc., and Teledyne FLIR Defense were named the next three highest-performing solutions and will each receive $100,000.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

MatrixSpace’s system advanced to the final phase of the competition as one of ten finalists selected for live testing at Falcon Peak 25.2, where solutions were evaluated under unscripted and operationally relevant conditions. According to the Defense Innovation Unit, the testing included a range of small unmanned aircraft flown individually and in coordinated groups, using diverse communication methods and flight profiles.

As noted by MatrixSpace, its solution is designed around an ultra-portable, distributed architecture that integrates low size, weight, power, and cost radar with AI-enabled edge processing and cloud connectivity.

“Building on our recent selection for Army xTech and Operation Flytrap 4.5, we are proud to be selected as the top performer and winner as a part of this DIU-led effort with an elite group of service branches to showcase how ultra-portable, AI-enabled, and cloud-connected CUAS solutions are redefining force protection for today’s defenders,” said Matthew Kling, vice president and general manager of AI Products at MatrixSpace.

“Our platform combines ultra-low SWaP-C radar, AI-driven edge intelligence, and distributed, networked CUAS powered by AiCloud to deliver unmatched performance in the field,” Kling said. “During the evaluation, we successfully detected, tracked, and classified every sortie flown—including RF-dark fiber FPVs, commercial drones, and custom-built UAVs—demonstrating that portable systems can deliver mission-critical capability without compromise.”

The LCS challenge was launched in May 2025 to identify sensing technologies capable of complementing existing high-end systems by enabling broader, more distributed counter-UAS coverage at lower cost. According to DIU, the finalist systems demonstrated potential reductions of 50 to 80 percent in total cost of ownership while meeting key performance and integration requirements.

During Falcon Peak 25.2, MatrixSpace’s solution was evaluated on detection, classification, localization, scalability, cost efficiency, and readiness for integration into joint command-and-control architectures. DIU stated that finalists were not informed in advance of the specific platforms or tactics they would face, ensuring that performance results reflected real-world operating conditions.

The Defense Innovation Unit said the LCS challenge supports efforts to field counter-UAS capabilities at speed and scale, particularly in fixed, mobile, and austere environments. As the overall winner, MatrixSpace will be eligible for potential follow-on opportunities, including Other Transaction agreements and additional contract pathways, to support transition into operational use.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

U.S. Army buys more of its toughest Arctic combat vehicle

The U.S. Army awarded BAE Systems Land and Armaments a $35 million contract modification on June 30, 2026, for additional production of the general-purpose...

AEVEX wins $50M deal for GPS-resistant strike drones

AEVEX Corp. secured a $50 million contract from the United States Air Force on June 30, 2026, to continue expanding unmanned mission-support capabilities for...

U.S. Air Force spends $471M to fix tanker parts supply problem

The U.S. Air Force awarded a combined $471 million in contracts to 28 different companies on a single day, spreading the work of exchanging...

U.S. Navy orders $312M more of its anti-missile jamming system

Northrop Grumman secured a $312 million contract from the U.S. Navy on June 24, 2026, to produce additional Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement Program Block...

L3Harris wins $614M deal to keep elite aircraft safe from missiles

When a U.S. Special Operations helicopter or tiltrotor flies into hostile territory and an enemy radar locks onto it, the crew has seconds to...