Safe Pro Posts 560% Revenue Surge on AI Drone Threat Detection
Safe Pro Group reported $1.22 million in first-quarter 2026 revenue, a 560% increase year over year, as its artificial intelligence-enabled drone platform detected 49,500 concealed threats across active defense deployments. The company, listed on the Nasdaq as Safe Pro Group (SPAI), said the results represent its strongest quarterly performance since going public.
Gross margin reached 54% in the quarter.
What Safe Pro Reported
Safe Pro’s AI system flagged 49,500 hidden threats during the quarter, a figure the company said reflects growing adoption by defense and security operators. Revenue of $1.22 million compared to $185,000 in the same period of 2025.
The company’s gross margin of 54% widened from 31% a year earlier, reflecting a shift toward higher-margin software services within its detection stack. A GlobeNewswire release published May 15 confirmed the figures.
Safe Pro did not disclose specific contract names or customer details.
The company said deployments span multiple geographic regions but did not name countries or partner agencies in the announcement.
Also Read: Irys Surges 24% as Permanent Onchain Data Storage Draws Rising Demand
Background
Safe Pro Group develops AI software that processes drone-captured imagery to identify landmines, unexploded ordnance, and other concealed threats in conflict-affected terrain. The company completed its Nasdaq listing and has positioned its platform as a software-first layer that works across drone hardware from multiple manufacturers.
Prior to the Q1 2026 results, the company’s quarterly revenue had not exceeded $250,000 in any reported period, making the 560% jump a significant departure from its prior growth trajectory. The broader military drone market has drawn increased capital since NATO member states accelerated modernization spending in 2024 and 2025.
Also Read: Venice Token Rises as Privacy-First AI Inference Network Targets $630 Million Market Cap
What Comes Next
Safe Pro said it expects continued revenue growth in the second quarter of 2026, driven by expanded contracts and additional regional deployments.
The company has not issued formal revenue guidance. Investors will watch whether the 54% gross margin holds as the company scales, and whether customer concentration risk is disclosed in the next filing.
A SPARC AI report from May 14 shows competitors are developing software-only drone systems in the same niche, signaling that pricing pressure could emerge.
Read Next: British Gas Pays £20M to Settle Forced Prepayment Meter Scandal
