- 5 new UKDI themes Autonomy, Decision Advantage, Logistics and Support, Effects, and Protection.
- These themes accelerate the development, scaling, and adoption of advanced and dual-use technologies across defence from autonomous and uncrewed vessels, quantum, AI and more.
- These core themes will help industry work with defence on the innovation it needs.
- UKDI is the focal point for innovation within the Ministry of Defence, helping UK companies rapidly develop and scale cutting-edge prototypes.
UK Defence Innovation (UKDI), the Ministry of Defence’s unified innovation team, today announced its five core themes Autonomy, Decision Advantage, Logistics and Support, Effects, and Protection.
These themes will guide innovative businesses to better collaborate with defence, helping deliver cutting-edge technology to the Armed Forces more quickly than ever before.
Backed by a ringfenced annual budget of at least £400 million, UKDI is part of the National Armaments Director (NAD) Group and is working to break down traditional barriers to accelerate cutting-edge capabilities from the drawing board to the production line at wartime pace.
As the strategic challenges defence faces change, the solutions must continuously evolve too. For example, secure communications for the Armed Forces are as critical today as they were during the Second World War, but in a digitally complex and highly contested environment, achieving this is significantly more challenging.
Together, the themes provide a clear and simple framework, weaving innovation directly into defence’s strategic priorities, translating breakthroughs in science and technology into solutions
- Autonomy Accelerating the adoption and scaling of trusted autonomy systems; creating platforms that can operate independently at scale across land, sea, air, and space, extending reach, reducing risk, and maintaining a presence where it matters most.
- Decision Advantage Success depends on rapidly turning raw data into clear, actionable insights through AI, secure communications, intelligence, cybersecurity, and advanced encryption, ensuring trusted information flow in complex environments.
- Logistics and Support Sustaining personnel and equipment in harsh environments requires innovations in medical support, energy, maintenance, and logistics, enabling faster deployment, reduced logistics, and greater endurance through portable healthcare, advanced materials, and low-cost sensing.
- Effects In defence, an ‘effect’ is the measurable outcome of an action. The UK requires a balanced approach combining precise specialist systems with simple, low-cost technologies deployable at scale, ensuring swift, lawful, and resilient responses across physical and digital domains.
- Protection As threats grow cheaper, faster, and less predictable, we must strengthen the protection of our people, assets, and infrastructure through improved concealment, detection, and layered defences across all environments, with innovation in lightweight materials, sensors, and counter-drone systems playing a vital role.
Rupert Pearce, National Armaments Director said
With confirmation of its core themes, UKDI has taken an important step towards becoming Defence’s powerful new innovation team. Working with start-ups and scale-ups to harness home-grown novel and dual-use tech, UKDI is a vital part of the NAD Group. Its essential work will deliver battle-ready capabilities, support economic growth, and secure our advantage, now and in the future.
John Cunningham, Director of Innovation, UKDI said
UKDI will not only find innovative solutions but will work with industry to ensure that our Armed Forces get the state-of-the-art solutions and technology they need.
These themes provide guidance to those working in innovative industries, including small businesses and tech start-ups.
More information on current UKDI opportunities can be found on the UKDI Live funding opportunities – GOV.UK page.
UKDI sits within the National Armaments Director (NAD) Group, the part of UK Defence responsible for developing, delivering and sustaining the UK’s national arsenal, as well as managing the defence estate, including its housing and harbour infrastructure.


