Lux Capital raises record $1.5B to target defence and frontier AI
Lux Capital, the US venture firm known for backing defence-tech heavyweight Anduril, has secured a massive $1.5 billion for its latest fund – the largest in the firm’s history. The new capital will be deployed into a fresh wave of startups at the intersection of defence technology, frontier AI, and other high-impact “hard tech” sectors that sit between government, security and advanced computing.
The raise underscores how investor appetite is shifting toward dual-use technologies that can serve both commercial and national security needs, as Western governments ramp up spending on modernising defence infrastructure and AI-enabled capabilities.
A milestone fund in a cautious VC market
Closing a $1.5 billion vehicle is notable in any cycle, but it is especially striking in a venture market still digesting the correction of 2022–2024. While many generalist funds have downsized or slowed deployment, specialist investors like Lux Capital are leaning into themes that appear structurally insulated from short-term market swings.
The new fund cements Lux Capital as one of the most influential players in the emerging ecosystem of defence and security-focused venture firms, alongside names backing companies such as Anduril, Palantir-style data platforms, and AI-native defence systems.
Why defence tech and frontier AI are in the spotlight
Several converging forces are driving capital toward defence technology and frontier AI:
- Rising geopolitical tensions: Conflicts in Europe, the Middle East and other regions have prompted NATO members and allied countries to boost defence budgets, creating a more predictable demand environment for innovative suppliers.
- Digital transformation of warfare: Modern defence increasingly relies on AI algorithms, autonomous systems, sensor fusion, and software-defined weapons platforms, areas where venture-backed startups can move faster than incumbents.
- Dual-use commercial upside: Technologies built for defence – from computer vision and edge computing to cybersecurity and satellite analytics – often have lucrative applications in logistics, infrastructure, and enterprise software.
Lux Capital has long argued that the line between “defence” and “deep tech” is blurring, as governments act more like anchor customers for breakthrough technologies that also serve civilian markets.
Building on the Anduril playbook
One of the most visible proof points for this thesis is Anduril, the defence-tech company founded by Oculus creator Palmer Luckey. Known for its autonomous surveillance towers, AI-enabled command platforms, and counter-drone systems, Anduril has become a symbol of how venture-backed startups can compete with traditional defence primes.
As an early backer of Anduril, Lux Capital has had a front-row seat to the changing procurement dynamics inside the Pentagon and allied ministries of defence. The firm’s new $1.5 billion fund is widely seen as a bet that the “Anduril model” – fast-moving software-first defence companies selling mission-critical systems – will be replicated across domains such as space, cyber, electronic warfare and battlefield AI.
Investment focus: from battlefield autonomy to AI infrastructure
Defence and security platforms
The fund is expected to target startups building:
- Autonomous defence systems – including unmanned aerial, maritime and ground vehicles powered by AI algorithms and sensor fusion.
- Command-and-control software – real-time decision platforms that integrate battlefield data, satellite imagery and intelligence feeds.
- Advanced surveillance and reconnaissance – leveraging computer vision, hyperspectral imaging and edge AI to detect threats faster.
- Cyber and electronic warfare tools – next-generation cybersecurity and signal intelligence products built for contested environments.
Frontier AI and enabling infrastructure
Beyond defence-specific platforms, Lux Capital is also expected to deploy significant capital into the broader AI infrastructure stack, including:
- AI accelerators and specialised chips designed for training and inference at the edge.
- Model optimisation frameworks that make large-scale AI models more efficient, secure and deployable in sensitive environments.
- Data security and privacy-preserving AI solutions critical for defence, intelligence and regulated industries.
This dual focus positions the fund at the crossroads of national security and the broader AI boom, where demand for both compute and trustworthy AI systems continues to surge.
Ethics, regulation and public scrutiny
The expansion of venture-backed defence and AI technologies does not come without controversy. Civil society groups and some technologists have raised concerns about the militarisation of AI, autonomous weapons and the potential for AI algorithms to be deployed in ways that undermine human rights.
For investors like Lux Capital, navigating this landscape requires more than capital. Limited partners increasingly expect robust frameworks around AI safety, export controls, and alignment with democratic values. Startups in the portfolio must grapple with compliance across multiple jurisdictions, from US ITAR regulations to emerging EU AI Act rules that shape what can be built and where it can be sold.
Signal to founders and rival investors
The $1.5 billion fund sends a clear message to founders building at the edge of defence and AI: there is deep, dedicated capital available for ambitious, technically complex projects that might once have struggled to find backers.
For rival venture firms, the move raises the bar. As generalist funds continue to trim their sails, sector-focused platforms like Lux Capital are staking out defensible territory in markets that may benefit from long-term tailwinds – including rising defence budgets, strategic competition between major powers, and the relentless advance of AI capabilities.
Whether this new wave of defence and frontier AI investment ultimately delivers both returns and responsible innovation will depend on how firms like Lux Capital balance speed with safeguards. What is clear is that the battle for technological advantage – on and off the battlefield – is becoming one of the defining venture stories of this decade.

