DIP decoded: What the £298bn Defence Investment Plan means for UK industry
The UK’s Defence Investment Plan gives industry its clearest signal yet on how the government intends to turn the Strategic Defence Review into funded programmes.
Published on 30 June, the plan is backed by £298 billion over four years and includes £15 billion of additional spending on top of last year’s Spending Review. Defence spending is expected to rise from £54 billion a year under the previous government to almost £80 billion by 2029, taking UK defence expenditure to 2.7% of GDP.
For industry, the plan matters not only because of the scale of spending, but because of where the money is directed. The DIP points to a force built around nuclear renewal, combat air, munitions, drones, autonomy, AI-enabled targeting and industrial resilience.
It is not a complete line-by-line defence budget. It is a statement of priorities. The question now is how quickly those priorities become contracts, capacity and deployable capability.
Defence Investment Plan: Key spending commitments
| Funding area | Commitment | What it is intended to support |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Defence Investment Plan | £298bn over four years | Delivery of the Strategic Defence Review and a move towards warfighting readiness |
| Additional defence funding | £15bn | Extra spending on top of last year’s Spending Review |
| Global Combat Air Programme | £8.6bn | Development of the UK, Japan and Italy next-generation combat aircraft programme |
| Nuclear deterrent and submarines | More than £63bn | Dreadnought, SSN-AUKUS, a new warhead and wider nuclear enterprise work |
| Project Royal Oak | £26bn over ten years | Upgrades at Faslane, Portsmouth and Devonport |
| Drones and autonomous systems | More than £5bn | Uncrewed systems across the Army, Royal Navy and RAF |
| Expendable autonomous systems | £650m | Lower-cost drones and uncrewed ground vehicles for land forces and special forces |
| Digital Targeting Web | Nearly £2bn | AI-enabled integration of sensors, commanders and weapons |
| Air, drone and missile defence | £790m | Radars, sensors, command and control, counter-drone systems and directed energy |
| Munitions and weapons | £11bn | Stockpiles, long-range strike, low-cost cruise missiles and one-way effectors |
| Procurement and efficiency reform | £900m | Transformation Fund, AI productivity and the Multilateral Defence Mechanism |
| Defence AI taskforce | £100m | Faster deployment of AI-enabled capabilities |
| AI security measures | £115m | Protection against AI-enabled threats, including biosecurity risks |
| Defence export facility | £50bn | UK Export Finance support for British defence firms pursuing overseas contracts |
Technology moves from future concept to core capability
The plan makes clear that drones, autonomy and AI are no longer being treated as experimental additions to traditional defence capability.
More than £5 billion has been allocated to drones and autonomous systems over the next four years, including £650 million for inexpensive expendable autonomous systems and uncrewed ground vehicles. The government has also committed nearly £2 billion to a Digital Targeting Web, designed to connect sensors, decision-makers and weapons through AI-enabled software.
That is one of the most important signals in the plan. The government is not simply buying individual platforms. It is trying to build a more connected force, able to find, decide and strike faster.

GCAP remains the anchor of future combat air, but the future RAF will not be built around a single aircraft. It will involve crewed fighters, collaborative combat aircraft, electronic warfare drones, counter-drone systems and AI-enabled targeting networks.
For the Royal Navy, the plan supports the move towards a hybrid fleet of crewed and uncrewed vessels. For the Army, it points towards greater use of FPV drones, interceptors, uncrewed ground vehicles and systems operating alongside helicopters.
Industrial capacity is now part of the capability equation
The Defence Investment Plan also places renewed emphasis on the UK’s ability to produce, adapt and sustain capability at scale.
That is most obvious in munitions. The plan commits £11 billion to weapons and stockpiles, including long-range strike weapons, low-cost cruise missiles and one-way effectors. By 2030, the government says the UK will have built at least six new energetics factories and increased national munitions production capacity.
The same logic applies to drones. Recent conflicts have shown that uncrewed systems evolve quickly, with battlefield feedback driving rapid changes in design, software and tactics. That creates a challenge for traditional procurement models, but also an opportunity for companies able to move quickly.

Investment in the Uncrewed Systems Centre in Swindon and the new Uncrewed Systems Taskforce is intended to help the UK develop and field autonomous capabilities more rapidly with industry.
Richard Whitehead, Chief Executive of AECOM Europe and India, said the DIP brought “much-needed clarity” on the ambitions set out in the Strategic Defence Review, but warned that delivery remained the central challenge.
“The challenge now is translating the ambitions set out in the Defence Investment Plan into projects and programmes that can be delivered efficiently, at pace and scale,” he said.
What the plan means for suppliers
| Industrial theme | Why it matters for UK companies |
|---|---|
| Combat air | GCAP sustains sovereign fast-jet design, engineering, sensors, mission systems and advanced manufacturing capability |
| Drones and autonomy | Demand is likely to grow across air, land and maritime systems, from expendable platforms to complex autonomous vehicles |
| AI and software | The Digital Targeting Web and RAID taskforce create opportunities in data, targeting, decision support, cyber resilience and software integration |
| Munitions | Stockpile rebuilding and new energetics factories point to long-term demand for weapons production and supply chain capacity |
| Maritime infrastructure | Project Royal Oak creates major opportunities in defence infrastructure, engineering and programme delivery |
| Air and missile defence | Funding for radars, sensors, directed energy and counter-drone systems supports a growing homeland defence market |
| Exports | The £50bn defence export facility is intended to help British firms compete internationally |
| Procurement reform | The test for SMEs will be whether reform turns ambition into faster routes to contract |
Phil Applegarth, Director at Supacat, said the recognition of SMEs as part of the UK’s defence industrial base was particularly encouraging, but added that the government’s commitment to remove barriers and speed up procurement would need to be matched by action.
Ollie Thompson, Technical Director at MarineAI, said the shift towards uncrewed systems and AI marked a necessary change in future naval capability, but said operational advantage would depend on integrating autonomy with crewed vessels, operators and decision-making systems.
Those comments point to the core challenge. The DIP provides a stronger funding signal, but industry will judge it by delivery.
The delivery test starts now
The Defence Investment Plan gives UK defence companies greater visibility over future priorities. It also places industry at the centre of national security, economic growth and technological advantage.
But the hardest work now begins.
The government wants faster procurement, stronger sovereign capability, greater production capacity and closer integration between traditional platforms and emerging technologies. Delivering that will require more than large spending lines. It will require contract flow, skilled people, resilient supply chains and a willingness to buy at the pace modern conflict demands.
The Defence Investment Plan is therefore not just a funding announcement. It is a test of whether the UK can turn strategic intent into industrial momentum, and industrial momentum into military capability.
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