Executive Summary:
Palladyne AI has secured two U.S. Army contracts to operationally validate its SwarmOS autonomous swarm software and Gremlin-X mini-bomber UAV. The effort will place both systems directly into military exercises with Army warfighters, supporting the Pentagon’s push toward autonomous, resilient, and cost-effective unmanned systems.
Palladyne AI Wins Key U.S. Army Validation Contracts
Palladyne AI SwarmOS has moved a step closer to operational military use after the company secured two contracts from the U.S. Army under the service’s Competitive Disruptive Applications Program.
Announced on June 17, the contracts will fund research, development, and operational validation of both the SwarmOS autonomous swarm platform and the Gremlin-X mini-bomber unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) in collaboration with Army personnel. The awards were made through the Army’s Disruptive Applications Broad Agency Announcement, a competitive program focused on identifying emerging technologies with military potential.
The contracts represent an important milestone for Palladyne AI as the company transitions from technology demonstrations toward direct operational evaluation with military users.
What Is SwarmOS?
SwarmOS is Palladyne AI’s edge-based autonomy software designed to allow a single operator to command multiple unmanned systems simultaneously, even when those platforms originate from different manufacturers.
Unlike traditional drone control architectures that depend heavily on centralized communications networks, SwarmOS is designed to function in degraded, denied, intermittent, and limited communications environments. The software operates directly on edge hardware and enables decentralized collaboration among autonomous systems.
According to the company, the technology addresses a growing military requirement for cross-platform interoperability, allowing heterogeneous drone fleets to operate together without relying on vulnerable centralized control nodes.
This capability aligns with broader U.S. Department of Defense modernization efforts focused on autonomous operations, distributed sensing, and resilient command-and-control architectures.
Gremlin-X Designed For Reusable Precision Strike Missions
The second system covered under the contracts is the Gremlin-X mini-bomber UAV, formerly known as Banshee.
Developed by GuideTech, a Palladyne AI subsidiary, Gremlin-X is a reusable Group 2 strike drone designed to deliver munitions against time-sensitive targets while operating in contested environments. Unlike many loitering munitions that are expended during an attack, Gremlin-X can return to base for reuse after completing a mission.
The reusable design could provide operational and cost advantages by reducing platform replacement requirements while maintaining precision strike capability. The concept reflects a growing defense industry trend toward balancing affordability with battlefield persistence.
Army Exercises To Test Operational Performance
Under the newly awarded contracts, the U.S. Army will evaluate SwarmOS and Gremlin-X during a series of exercises involving the Army’s 4th Infantry Division in Colorado and California. These events will assess how the technologies support reconnaissance and target acquisition missions under realistic operational conditions.
SwarmOS will also operate through the Android Team Awareness Kit (ATAK), a widely used military command-and-control platform that enables situational awareness and battlefield coordination across units. Integration with ATAK is significant because it places the autonomy software within an existing Army operational ecosystem rather than a standalone demonstration environment.
In addition, Palladyne AI plans to demonstrate SwarmOS, IntelliSwarm, and Gremlin-X during the Northern Strike 26-2 joint military exercise, which is expected to involve more than 9,000 participants across multiple operational domains.
Why The Contracts Matter
The awards reflect a broader shift occurring across the U.S. military as autonomous systems move from experimental demonstrations toward operational deployment.
Recent conflicts have highlighted the growing importance of unmanned systems, autonomous collaboration, and resilient communications in contested environments. Military planners increasingly seek technologies capable of operating when GPS signals, communications links, or centralized command infrastructure are disrupted.
SwarmOS directly addresses this requirement by enabling decentralized autonomy across multiple unmanned platforms. Meanwhile, Gremlin-X supports emerging concepts that emphasize affordable mass, reusable strike assets, and distributed lethality.
The Army’s decision to place both systems into operational exercises suggests growing interest in evaluating how autonomy can reduce operator workload while increasing battlefield responsiveness. Although the contracts do not guarantee future procurement, successful performance during military exercises could position the technologies for additional testing and potential transition into larger defense programs.
Growing Momentum In Defense Autonomy
The Army contracts add to Palladyne AI’s expanding defense portfolio. Earlier in 2026, the company also received an Air Force Research Laboratory contract focused on advancing autonomous swarming and cross-domain coordination capabilities involving air, maritime, land, and space systems.
Together, these efforts highlight increasing Pentagon investment in collaborative autonomy technologies capable of connecting multiple autonomous platforms into coordinated operational networks.
As military modernization programs continue to prioritize autonomous systems, operational validation with active-duty warfighters remains one of the most important steps toward fielding new capabilities.
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