The U.S. Army has awarded Anduril Industries a potential 10-year, $20 billion contract to consolidate the procurement of the company’s commercial IT platforms and related services as part of efforts to shorten procurement timelines, reduce administrative costs and speed up the deployment of capabilities to soldiers and government stakeholders.

The Army’s enterprise contract with Anduril reflects the government’s continued focus on modernizing how it acquires and deploys advanced technologies. Conversations around innovation and digital capabilities across the federal landscape will continue at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Digital Transformation Summit on April 22. Register today to reserve your spot!
The Department of War said Friday the Army Contracting Command at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland awarded the firm-fixed-price contract to integrate Anduril’s commercial platforms into a unified capability to support the service branch’s operational and business requirements.
In a statement published Friday, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, director of Joint Interagency Task Force 401, said the enterprise contract provides a framework for counter-uncrewed aircraft system interoperability and foundational command-and-control capabilities.
“The Department of War and interagency partners now possess a clear path to a cohesive and operationally effective ecosystem that gives our warfighters the most advanced tools to defend the homeland,” Ross added.
The Army is expanding its use of enterprise contracts to promote competition and streamline procurement processes.
What Is the Scope of the Army Enterprise Contract?
The Pentagon said the contract consolidates current and future commercial offerings, including the company’s Lattice artificial intelligence-enabled software platform, along with integrated hardware, computer infrastructure, data and technical support services.
DOW previously managed more than 120 procurement actions for the company’s commercial platforms. According to the Army, the enterprise contract eliminates pass-through charges on subcontracts and establishes pre-negotiated terms and pricing.
The service expects work to run through March 12, 2036, and will obligate funds and determine work locations upon award of each task order. The contract has a five-year base term and an optional ordering period of five years.
“Enterprise contracts are a key part of our modernization strategy, allowing us to consolidate software agreements, eliminate redundancies, and accelerate the delivery of critical tools,” said Gabe Chiulli, chief technology officer for the service’s Office of the Chief Information Officer.
In 2025, Palantir secured a potential 10-year, $10 billion enterprise agreement from the Army, consolidating 75 contracts into a single deal to accelerate the delivery of commercial software to warfighters.
What Does Anduril Industries Do?
Anduril is a defense technology company that develops autonomous systems, AI-enabled systems and software-defined platforms designed to support defense and national security missions. The company’s Lattice is an open-architecture, AI-enabled software designed to integrate sensors, autonomous systems and data processing capabilities to support command-and-control functions and situational awareness across defense environments.
The latest Army contract came days after Anduril agreed to acquire ExoAnalytic Solutions to expand its space domain awareness and missile defense capabilities.
In 2025, the company secured a $159 million contract from the Army to build and deliver warfighter capabilities under the Soldier Borne Mission Command program. It also secured a spot on the Missile Defense Agency’s $151 billion Scalable Homeland Innovative Enterprise Layered Defense contract.














