The global autonomous battlefield resupply market is projected to grow from USD 0.9 billion in 2026 to USD 5.2 billion by 2036, expanding at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 19.2%, according to a new study by Future Market Insights (FMI). The market is experiencing rapid expansion as defense agencies worldwide accelerate investments in autonomous logistics platforms, unmanned cargo transport systems, and next-generation battlefield sustainment technologies designed to reduce personnel exposure in contested environments.
Military organizations are increasingly deploying autonomous ground vehicles (UGVs), aerial cargo unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), robotic trailers, and hybrid logistics platforms to support ammunition delivery, medical resupply, food distribution, battery transport, and casualty evacuation missions. Advances in supervised autonomy, AI-enabled navigation, secure communications, and mission planning software are transforming battlefield logistics into a key pillar of modern defense modernization programs.
The industry is expected to generate an absolute dollar opportunity exceeding USD 4.4 billion over the forecast period as defense ministries continue shifting battlefield logistics toward autonomous and remotely operated systems. Supervised autonomy is projected to account for 44.2% of total market revenue in 2026, making it the dominant autonomy category globally. This segment's leadership is driven by human-in-the-loop command approval, enhanced operational safety, compliance with military engagement rules, improved route control and mission oversight, secure decision-making in contested environments, and greater trust among defense operators.
Defense forces are expected to hold 58.7% market share in 2026, reinforcing their position as the primary customer group for autonomous battlefield resupply technologies. Growing demand stems from tactical sustainment requirements, forward operating base logistics, ammunition and medical supply transport, distributed force operations, multi-domain battlefield readiness, and personnel risk reduction initiatives. Military organizations increasingly view autonomous logistics systems as strategic force multipliers capable of supporting sustained operations across dispersed and contested theaters.
North America remains the largest consumer of autonomous battlefield resupply systems due to extensive defense modernization initiatives, high military spending, and active experimentation with robotic logistics platforms. The United States is projected to record the highest CAGR globally at 22.8% through 2036, driven by U.S. Army robotic resupply initiatives, Marine Corps autonomous logistics programs, human-machine teaming strategies, advanced military robotics funding, and multi-domain sustainment modernization. Europe is experiencing strong adoption due to increased defense investments and expanding military autonomy programs, with the United Kingdom forecast to grow at a CAGR of 21.7% and Germany at 20.9%. Asia-Pacific is emerging as a strategic growth region as governments strengthen border security, military mobility, and indigenous defense manufacturing capabilities.
Key market participants include Oshkosh Defense, Rheinmetall AG, Milrem Robotics, Near Earth Autonomy, Bell Textron Inc., Honeywell Aerospace, Hanwha Aerospace, General Dynamics Land Systems, Teledyne FLIR, and BAE Systems. Recent industry developments highlight increasing collaboration between defense agencies, robotics specialists, and aerospace companies focused on next-generation autonomous logistics solutions. The market presents significant opportunities across military robotics platforms, autonomous cargo aircraft, defense AI software, tactical communications systems, battlefield logistics automation, and autonomous mission management platforms.


