Motorola Solutions buys Israeli drone defense startup D-Fend for $1.5 billion

Raanana-based firm uses radio waves to commandeer UAVs instead of jamming or intercepting them; system deployed in over 30 countries; described as largest-ever Israeli defense tech exit

Illustrative: Indian army display drones during an operational drill in Pathankot, India, February 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Channi Anand)

US tech giant Motorola Solutions announced Monday that it will buy Israeli drone defense startup D-Fend for $1.5 billion, as governments and critical infrastructure ​operators worldwide rush to defend against the growing threat of rogue ‌drones.

Shares of the drone defense company were up more than 2 percent after the deal was announced, which Hebrew media described as the largest-ever sale of an Israeli defense company.

Founded in 2016 in central Raanana, D-Fend makes technology that uses radio waves to take control of rogue drones mid-flight, rather than disrupting signals or shooting them down. While it can defend against remotely operated drones, it would not work against UAVs guided by fiber-optic cables, such as the ones Hezbollah has employed against Israel in recent weeks to deadly effect. 

Its flagship ​product, EnforceAir, is deployed in over 30 countries including NATO members to ​protect military zones, airports and critical infrastructure. Its tech is also used by the US ‌departments ⁠of Homeland Security, Defense and Justice.

Attacks on key infrastructure such as data centers in the US-Israeli war with Iran and airport shutdowns across Europe caused by rogue Russian drones have recently shown the ​need for systems that can intercept drones without jamming communications or causing ​damage.

The Safer Skies Act, a US law passed last year, allows certified state and local police officers to actively hijack and safely ​land unauthorized drones, creating a new market for drone-takeover tools such ​as D-Fend.

“Rogue drones have transformed our skies into a landscape of unpredictable risk, where simple detection is no longer enough,” Motorola Solutions CEO and chairman Greg Brown said in a statement on Monday.

The company ​said the D-Fend deal is expected to close in the ​fourth quarter ⁠of 2026. D-Fend has posted annual revenue growth of more than 50% over the last three years, with full-year 2026 revenue expected to be $185 million, Motorola ⁠Solutions said. The company was last valued at around $200 million in 2024, according to estimates reported by the Haaretz daily.

According to the Globes business newspaper, D-Fend’s 200-plus employees will move to Motorola Solutions when the deal is finalized later this year.

The deal builds ​on Motorola Solutions’ $4.4 ​billion deal last ⁠year for Silvus, which provides secure communications and networking for drones, giving it both drone and anti-drone capabilities.

The ​anti-drone market was valued at $2.47 billion in 2026, ​and is projected to reach $8.42 billion by 2031, according to research firm Mordor Intelligence.

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