Protection tech startup Epirus, which makes a speciality of anti-drone techniques, has raised an oversubscribed $250 million Collection D, it informed TechCrunch.
Epirus, based mostly in Torrance, California, was beforehand valued at $1.35 billion for its $200 million Collection C in 2022, per its announcement on the time. Epirus didn’t give a selected valuation for this spherical, however confirmed to TechCrunch that it’s over $1 billion. (Bloomberg reported in January 2025 that Epirus was elevating this spherical at a decrease valuation than its Collection C.)
The Collection D was co-led by 8VC and Washington Harbour Companions LP, a D.C. based mostly funding agency. Different buyers embrace Gaingels and Common Dynamics Land Methods, a subsidiary of one of many U.S.’ largest protection contractors.
This brings the whole raised by Epirus to over $550 million. Its standing as a unicorn places it amongst comparatively few protection techs in that league. There’s Anduril, which is elevating at a $28 billion valuation, plus Protect AI which is reportedly elevating at $5 billion, and Saronic, which was valued at $4 billion in its newest spherical.
Epirus’ flagship product is Leonidas, which beams high-powered electromagnetic pulses at drones because it strikes throughout the battlefield. Epirus has gained various U.S. navy contracts, together with a $66 Military million deal from 2023, per its web site.
Joe Lonsdale, one among Epirus’ co-founders and the managing associate of 8VC, touted Leonidas because the “greatest safety towards drone swarms right now” in an announcement despatched to TechCrunch. (Lonsdale can be a co-founder of Palantir.)
Epirus says it plans to make use of the funds to increase into worldwide and business markets. The agency additionally says it is going to spend money on rising its workforce, enhancing its provide chain resiliency, and opening a brand new simulation middle in Oklahoma to coach troopers.