Munich Startup
Helsing at 18 billion valuation: What the mega-deal means for Germany’s startup scene

Helsing at 18 billion valuation: What the mega-deal means for Germany’s startup scene

Kyrill Ring

Kyrill Ring

Kyrill Ring hat 15 Jahre lang als Live-Reporter fürs Fernsehen gearbeitet und ist seit Juli 2025 als Brand & Communications Manager bei Munich Startup tätig. Hier verantwortet er neben seiner Arbeit als Redakteur für die Webseite neue Formate wie den Videopodcast Pitch&People.

May 21, 2026

4 min. read time

That a defencetech company of all things reaches this dimension marks a profound shift in the European startup ecosystem. Just a few years ago, defense technology was considered barely investable by many European investors. Today, the sector is developing into a geopolitically charged billion-dollar market — with Munich as one of Europe’s most important centers.

Why Helsing is much more than just another unicorn

Helsing differs significantly from classic German software or B2B startups. The company develops AI-based defense systems, software for military decision-making processes, and autonomous technologies for modern battlefields. The startup recently gained particular prominence through its activities in AI-controlled drone technology.

The possible billion-dollar deal demonstrates above all one thing: European investors and governments now regard technological sovereignty as a strategic priority. Defense technology is increasingly understood not merely as a military matter, but as an infrastructural prerequisite for geopolitical agency.

“A really strong signal” for the German ecosystem

For Arno Eggers, head of Munich Startup, a financing round of this magnitude would have enormous signaling power for Germany as a location.

“A deal of this enormous scale is a really strong signal. It proves that we produce startups that compete at the world’s top level both technologically and financially. This case makes clear: we can also build geopolitically decisive, highly complex deeptech giants.”

Until now, Germany was internationally known primarily as the home of industrial mid-market companies, enterprise software providers, and B2B specialists. Helsing could shift this image, at least partially — toward a location for strategic AI and deeptech companies.

Why defencetech suddenly becomes a billion-dollar market

For a long time, defencetech was considered difficult terrain for venture capital in Europe. Many funds categorically excluded investments in military-adjacent technologies. Since Russia’s attack on Ukraine, however, this attitude has changed considerably.

Eggers sees this as the central driver of Helsing’s momentum:

“Defencetech was an absolute taboo topic for European investors for a long time. However, the geopolitical upheavals of recent years have reversed the trend.”

Defense is increasingly understood today as a necessary safeguard for democratic and economic stability.

“That’s why the momentum for such large financing rounds in this segment is exactly so strong right now.”

At the same time, defense spending across Europe is rising dramatically. Governments are increasingly seeking technological solutions for modern conflict scenarios — from AI systems to autonomous drones to data analysis platforms.

Beginning of a European defencetech boom?

The Helsing deal could simultaneously be a harbinger of a new European startup wave. More and more founding teams are working on technologies for security, cyber defense, robotics, and military AI applications.

For Eggers, it’s clear that Helsing should not remain an isolated case:

“Europe has now recognized that technological sovereignty is vital, and therefore we will experience a major defencetech boom in the near future. But how long it will last remains to be seen, but I think it will be more of a sprint than a marathon.”

Photo: Helsing

Europe’s sovereignty remains fragile despite billion-dollar round

Despite the potential record valuation, Eggers sees European technological sovereignty as far from secured. Many large financing rounds for European startups continue to depend on international capital, often from the USA or the Middle East.

“A single large financing unfortunately does not create European technological sovereignty.”

The structural problem persists:

“Too often, purely European venture capital is insufficient for such dimensions, which means that financial control over our key technologies frequently flows back to non-European countries anyway.”

In global competition, the possible Helsing deal is therefore more of a glimmer of hope than a turning point.

Munich positions itself as a European deeptech hub

For Munich, Helsing could still have enormous impact. The city has been developing for years as a center for AI, space, robotics, and defencetech startups. With companies like Helsing, Europe is for the first time creating technology players with global geopolitical influence.

Eggers also sees this as an opportunity for the long-term positioning of the location:

“We are on exactly the right path here in Munich to lay the proper foundation for precisely that. Whether through our strong international appearances like recently in Texas or the upcoming major Startup Festival in July, our local ecosystem is just now aligning everything to produce even more such global players in the future.”

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