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U.S. Army Awards $16.8M for New Ghost-X ISR Drones with HD45LP Sensors to Enhance Tactical Recon Units.
On April 7, 2026, the Department of War awarded Anduril Industries a $16.788 million firm-fixed-price contract to deliver Ghost-X small uncrewed aircraft systems equipped with Trillium HD45LP sensors. The award clearly defines both platform and payload, highlighting a deliberate move toward fielding integrated, mission-ready ISR systems.
This combination gives frontline units faster target detection, persistent tracking, and reliable day-and-night surveillance in contested environments. By pushing compact, high-performance ISR closer to the fight, the Army is accelerating decision-making at the tactical edge, where speed and clarity directly shape battlefield outcomes.
The U.S. Army’s $16.8 million award to Anduril Industries for Ghost X drones equipped with Trillium HD45LP sensors highlights a clear shift toward compact, endurance-focused ISR platforms delivering real-time reconnaissance at the tactical edge (Picture Source: Anduril)
What makes this development more important than the contract value alone is the specificity of the configuration. The Army did not simply contract for a generic small drone capability. The notice explicitly references Ghost-X with Trillium HD45LP, suggesting interest in an integrated tactical system that combines a vertical takeoff air vehicle with a lightweight stabilized day-and-night sensor package. In a battlefield increasingly shaped by dispersion, contested electromagnetic conditions, and the need for persistent local reconnaissance, such specificity matters because it points to operational demand for complete mission-ready ISR nodes rather than stand-alone airframes.
Ghost-X itself sits in an increasingly relevant niche between short-endurance quadcopters and larger, more logistically demanding tactical UAVs. Anduril has described the system as a modular and expeditionary aircraft designed for reconnaissance, security, and force protection, while public product material highlights Ghost-X’s tandem-rotor configuration, configurable gimbal options, and enhanced payload capacity. In Anduril’s 2023 unveiling, the company said an upgraded propulsion system enables a dual-battery configuration that extends endurance to 75 minutes and doubles total payload capacity compared with the earlier Anduril also indicates a payload capacity of up to 55 pounds, or 25 kilograms, underlining that Ghost-X is designed to do more than carry a simple observation camera.
The choice of the Trillium HD45 helps show why this Ghost-X configuration stands out. Trillium presents the HD45 as a lightweight stabilized gimbal designed for small drones and launched-effect platforms, with day and thermal imaging, continuous pan, onboard tracking, and geolocation functions. The system is built to deliver a clear electro-optical and infrared picture without adding too much weight, which is important for preserving endurance and keeping the aircraft effective in day-and-night reconnaissance missions.
That pairing gives Ghost-X a clear battlefield role. A drone with endurance measured in more than an hour becomes much more valuable when matched with a lightweight turret able to stabilize imagery, retain metadata, support tracking functions, and provide thermal observation after dark. For forward units, this expands utility well beyond simple local spotting. It supports route surveillance, observation of likely enemy approaches, monitoring of urban edges and tree lines, and sustained watch over target areas without having to commit larger brigade-level assets. If the Army is indeed emphasizing Ghost-X with the HD45LP configuration, the procurement suggests a preference for sensor efficiency and persistence at the tactical edge, where every additional minute on station can matter.
The contract also fits a broader evolution in Army thinking on lower-echelon ISR. In September 2024, Anduril announced that Ghost-X had been selected for the U.S. Army’s company-level small UAS directed requirement, directly tying the platform to maneuver formations that need faster access to reconnaissance without waiting for higher-level ISR tasking. Read alongside the April 2026 contract notice, this latest award can be read as another sign that the Army wants small uncrewed systems that shorten the sensor-to-decision cycle for forward commanders, especially in environments where terrain, jamming, or tempo complicate the use of traditional surveillance assets.
There is also an industrial and doctrinal signal in the contracting language itself. The notice says one bid was received, which may indicate that the requirement was tailored around a very specific capability mix rather than a broad commodity procurement. By naming both the air vehicle family and the sensor, the Army effectively points to a preferred operational package: a quiet VTOL platform with meaningful payload growth, paired with a compact EO/IR system that offers tracking, geolocation, and digital video output in a lightweight format. That is a more revealing story than the usual headline about another drone award, because it shows how the service is refining what it actually expects from small tactical UAS in real-world use.
More than a $16.8 million contract, this award suggests that the Army is placing increasing value on compact uncrewed systems that can stay aloft longer, carry more capable sensors, and deliver usable reconnaissance directly to dispersed units under pressure. In that sense, Ghost-X with Trillium HD45LP is not just a procurement item but a marker of where small-unit ISR is heading: toward integrated, persistent, and tactically resilient airborne sensing rather than short-range observation alone.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.