Skip to content
The Netherlands, in English
Home Tech & Science Article
Tech & Science

Dutch Defence Signs Drone Software Deal With Intelic

The Dutch Ministry of Defence has signed a cooperation agreement with Amsterdam-based Intelic to build software for unmanned systems.

Published 6 July 2026 · 06:50 CET
2 min read
Small unbranded drones, testing equipment and laptop screens on a software lab workbench.
Daily Dutch News / AI-generated editorial illustration

The Dutch Ministry of Defence has signed a new cooperation agreement with Intelic, a Dutch company that builds software for unmanned systems.

The agreement is part of the Action Plan for Production Security in Unmanned Systems. Defence says Intelic will deliver software and build an environment specifically with and for the armed forces.

Why software matters

Drone warfare is not only about the drone itself.

Modern armed forces often use unmanned systems from different manufacturers. If every drone has its own separate control system, operations become slower and harder to coordinate.

Intelic’s work focuses on interoperability: making different unmanned systems work together in one operational environment.

That matters because drones are becoming central to modern defence. They are used for reconnaissance, protection, logistics, battlefield awareness and other military tasks.

A strategic technology issue

The agreement is also about keeping important defence technology under Dutch control.

The Ministry of Defence says the cooperation is a new step under its action plan for unmanned systems. The wider goal is to make sure the Netherlands can develop, buy and use critical defence technology when needed.

Intelic says the strategic partnership is worth more than €30 million over 3 years and will help build the software foundation for the Netherlands’ future unmanned systems ecosystem.

Why this is important for Amsterdam tech

Intelic is based in Amsterdam, giving the story a local tech angle as well as a defence angle.

The deal shows that Dutch defence technology is becoming more serious as a startup and scale-up sector. Instead of only buying finished hardware abroad, the Netherlands is investing in software capability at home.

That shift fits a wider European trend. Defence, AI, drones and digital sovereignty are becoming more connected.

What happens next

The next step is implementation. Intelic will work with Defence to build and develop the software environment.

The real test will be whether the system can support different unmanned platforms in practical military use. The agreement also sends a wider message: in modern defence, software can be as strategic as hardware.

Source: Dutch Ministry of Defence announcement and Intelic company announcement.

Amsterdam Police Play Chase Game With Children in Overtoomsesluis READ NEXT · Society

Amsterdam Police Play Chase Game With Children in Overtoomsesluis

Amsterdam police in Overtoomsesluis organised the first edition of De Hunt, a playful chase game with children and local community partners.

Continue reading
THE MORNING BRIEFING
Five things from the Netherlands, every weekday at 07:00.
Subscribe