United States Defense Market Data report provides:
Defense Budget Allocations: The interactive excel sheet allows the user to analyze total defense expenditure with flexible filters across major budget heads, including Acquisitions, RDT&E, Infrastructure, Personnel, Operations and Maintenance (O&M), and Other expenditures. Users can further enhance analysis by viewing contextual indicators such as exchange rates, real and nominal GDP, population, defense spending as a percentage of GDP, and defense budget per capita.Defense Program Forecasts: The interactive Excel sheet allows the user to explore forecast spending across defense sectors and sub-sectors, with the ability to drill down to individual programs and suppliers. Interactive filters enable users to assess funding priorities, program pipelines, and supplier exposure within the country’s defense ecosystem.
Fleet Size: The interactive excel sheet allows the user to evaluate current and future equipment inventories by filtering data on equipment variants, acquisition timelines, current unit counts, annual fleet maintenance costs, manufacturers, and countries of origin. The workbook also provides forward-looking indicators such as projected retirement years, replacement probabilities, and service life extension likelihoods, offering clear visibility into modernization and replacement opportunities.
Two interactive visualization sheets with charts and graphs provide expert insights, enabling users to explore quantitative trends within the selected aerospace and defense market. The visualization sheets are supported by detailed underlying datasets covering Defense Budget Allocations, Fleet Size and Platform Analysis, and Defense Program Forecasts
In 2026, the US government allocated $1.05 trillion to its defense budget, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.8% from 2022 to 2026. The defense budget is projected to grow at a CAGR of 3.4% over the forecast period, reaching $1.71 trillion by 2031. This increase in defense expenditure is expected to be driven by higher investment in acquisition and RDT&E programs, with the US Congress approving a one-time additional funding allocation of $150 billion over and above the $900.6 billion formally approved in the NDAA 2026. US defense expenditure will also be driven by the need to maintain a Qualitative Military Edge (QME) over peer and near-peer adversaries and to reinforce technological dominance over strategic rivals.
Most of the additional $150 billion funding is expected to be directed toward the Golden Dome program, as well as to jump-start new initiatives to expand manufacturing of air defense weapon systems and precision-guided munitions. With a proposal to increase defense expenditure in 2027 by nearly $500 billion to reach $1.50 trillion, US defense expenditure could rise sharply to support expanded funding for next-generation weapon systems, such as the proposed Trump-class battleship.
Key Highlights
- Drivers: This increase in defense expenditure is expected to be driven by higher investment in acquisition and RDT&E programs, with the US Congress approving a one-time additional funding allocation of $150 billion over and above the $900.6 billion formally approved in the NDAA 2026. US defense expenditure will also be driven by the need to maintain a Qualitative Military Edge (QME) over peer and near-peer adversaries and to reinforce technological dominance over strategic rivals.
- Top 3 Sectors: Military Fixed Wing Aircraft, Missiles and Missile Defense Systems, Military Simulation and Training.
- Top Country of Origin of Existing Fleet: Indigenous, Canada, Croatia, Switzerland, Germany
Report Scope
This Excel deliverable gives important, expert insight you won’t find in any other source. The interactive model illustrates qualitative and quantitative trends within the specified market. Various sections covered in the workbook are as follows:- Interactive Visualizations: Two interactive dashboard sheets featuring charts and graphs that enable rapid analysis of qualitative and quantitative trends across the selected aerospace and defense market.
- Defense Budget Allocations: Detailed coverage of total defense expenditure with breakdowns across acquisitions, RDT&E, infrastructure, personnel, operations and maintenance (O&M), and other spending categories, supported by key macroeconomic and contextual indicators.
- Defense Program Forecasts: Forecast analysis of defense spending by sector, sub-sector, program, and supplier, enabling evaluation of procurement priorities, funding pipelines, and competitive positioning within the country.
- Fleet Size and Platform Inventory: Comprehensive assessment of military equipment inventories, including platform variants, acquisition timelines, current unit counts, manufacturers, country of origin, maintenance costs, and projected retirement, replacement, and service life extension indicators.
- Sources: Data compiled from a wide range of authoritative public and proprietary sources, including government budgets, defense ministries, armed forces disclosures, international organizations, industry reports, and the analyst’s internal databases.
Reasons to Buy
- Identify high-growth investment and procurement opportunities by analyzing historical data and long-term trends in the United States defense market across budget categories, sectors, and platforms through 2035.
- Track and benchmark defense budget allocations across acquisitions, RDT&E, personnel, infrastructure, and O&M, supported by macroeconomic indicators such as GDP, population, and defense spending as a percentage of GDP.
- Assess program-level funding priorities and pipelines by drilling down into defense programs by sector, sub-sector, and supplier, enabling evaluation of funding stability, growth potential, and competitive exposure.
- Evaluate fleet modernization and replacement opportunities using detailed platform-level data covering current inventories, acquisition timelines, maintenance costs, projected retirements, and replacement and service life extension probabilities.
- Strengthen competitive and supplier intelligence through comparative analysis of manufacturers, country of origin, and supplier participation across key defense programs and platforms.
- Save time and improve decision-making efficiency with a ready-to-use, interactive Excel workbook featuring intuitive pivots and dashboards that allow rapid filtering, customization, and scenario exploration without the need for additional modeling.
Table of Contents
- Home Page
- About the Analyst
- Methodology
- Data Vizualization (Defense Budget Sector, Fleet Size)
- Fleet Size
- Forecast (Defense Budget Allocations, Defense Program Forecasts)
- Sources
- Analyst Comments
- Glossary
- Contact the Publisher
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- The Boeing Co
- RTX Corp
- Lockheed Martin Corp
- General Dynamics Corp
- General Electric Co
- Northrop Grumman Corp
- Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co
- L3Harris Technologies Inc
- Lockheed Martin Rotary and Mission Systems
- Leidos Holdings Inc
- BAE Systems Inc
- Textron Inc
- Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control
- Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc
- Honeywell Aerospace Northrop Grumman Aeronautics Systems
- TransDigm Group Inc
- Howmet Aerospace Inc
- Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems (Inactive)
- Spirit AeroSystems Holdings Inc
- StandardAero Inc
- Finmeccanica North America Inc. (Inactive)
- Abaco Systems Inc
- HEICO Corp
- V2X Inc
- Bell Textron Inc.
- Raytheon Network Centric Systems (Inactive)
- Leonardo DRS Inc
- Woodward Inc
- AAR Corp
- Axon Enterprise Inc
- Vista Outdoor Inc
- PAE Inc
- Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings Inc
- Panasonic Avionics Corporation
- Vought Aircraft IndustriesInc. (Inactive)
- The Aerospace Corp Cirrus Aircraft Ltd
- Kratos Defense & Security Solutions Inc
- Triumph Group Inc
- Doss Aviation Inc
- Astronics Corp
- The Boeing Co
- RTX Corp
- Lockheed Martin Corp
- General Dynamics Corp
- General Electric Co
- Northrop Grumman Corp
- Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co
- Collins Aerospace
- Pratt & Whitney Co
- GE Aviation
- L3Harris Technologies Inc
- Lockheed Martin Rotary and Mission Systems
- Leidos Holdings Inc
- BAE Systems Inc
- Textron Inc
- Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control
- Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc
- Honeywell Aerospace
- Northrop Grumman Aeronautics Systems
- TransDigm Group Inc
- Howmet Aerospace Inc
- Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems (Inactive)
- Spirit AeroSystems Holdings Inc
- StandardAero Inc
- Finmeccanica North America Inc. (Inactive)
- Abaco Systems Inc
- HEICO Corp
- V2X Inc
- Bell Textron Inc.
- Raytheon Network Centric Systems (Inactive)
- Leonardo DRS Inc
- Woodward Inc
- AAR Corp
- Axon Enterprise Inc
- Vista Outdoor Inc
- PAE Inc
- Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings Inc
- Panasonic Avionics Corporation
- Vought Aircraft Industries
- Inc. (Inactive)
- The Aerospace Corp
- Cirrus Aircraft Ltd
- Kratos Defense & Security Solutions Inc
- Triumph Group Inc
- Doss Aviation Inc
- Astronics Corp
- Ducommun Inc
- AeroVironment Inc
- Kaman Corp
- Willis Lease Finance Corp
- Cadre Holdings Inc
- Kaman Corp
- Willis Lease Finance Corp
- Cadre Holdings Inc

