DroneDeploy, long known as a leader in drone-based data gathering, is officially entering a new era. Today, the San Francisco–based company announced it has reached break-even and secured $15 million in strategic funding from existing investors.
Unlike the splashy venture rounds that fueled much of Silicon Valley’s drone sector in the 2010s, this investment isn’t about survival — it’s about accelerating DroneDeploy’s pivot from flying cameras to a broader future of AI and robotics.
From drones to data: Progress AI and beyond
At the center of this shift is Progress AI, a software which DroneDeploy bills as its vision-language solution. In short, it automates construction progress reports. Traditionally, generating accurate site updates required expensive manual workflows. DroneDeploy says its AI can now deliver reports with over 95% accuracy in minutes.
Mike Winn, co-founder and CEO of DroneDeploy, told The Drone Girl that the accuracy benchmark is based on comparisons against human construction professionals performing the same analysis.
“Customers want to ensure they are getting valuable insights that make the job easier, and not noisy or inaccurate data that wastes time and money,” Winn said. “Generally customers are excited about getting both safety and progress data from a single capture, and quickly feel at ease with the product once they see the value and accuracy.”
The demand is strong in hyperscale data center construction — a fast-growing vertical where on-time delivery is paramount. Winn said 84% of DroneDeploy’s customers’ top 50 projects, totaling $35 billion in development, are focused on data centers or other critical infrastructure. But while data centers may be the headline today, he emphasized that the platform applies broadly across sectors like infrastructure, energy and agriculture.
Why raise $15 million if DroneDeploy is break-even?
Winn said that the raise is “strategic, not a traditional growth round.” The funds will specifically target AI and robotics development, including autonomous quadrupeds, aerial drones and eventually humanoid systems. The company is also diversifying its reality capture stack beyond drones, adding support for LiDAR sensors, fixed cameras and even mobile devices.
“DroneDeploy sits at the intersection of AI and robotics,” Winn said. “This fundraise will help advance our automation roadmap to meet customer needs.”
The company already has a track record in robotics besides drones. Since acquiring Rocos, DroneDeploy has built an operating system for deploying robots at scale, powering pilots like Boston Dynamics’ Spot robots conducting overnight inspections on oil and gas and construction sites. Turner Construction, for example, used DroneDeploy-powered Spot robots to cut inspection times by more than 95% on large-scale data center projects.
The path to sustainable growth
DroneDeploy’s break-even milestone stands out in a drone and robotics market still littered with companies struggling to recover from the overfunded “ZIRP era” of 2021.That was the Zero Interest-Rate Policy era, when borrowing costs were so low that companies could much more easily invest and hiring, but that also led to asset bubbles and excessive borrowing…and layoffs down the road.
Unlike peers that chased aggressive valuations, DroneDeploy took a disciplined approach, focusing on profitability and recurring revenue.
While Winn declined to share revenue figures, he said DroneDeploy is “by a significant margin” the largest player in the reality capture space. The platform has been used on 1.7 million sites across 180 countries. As of early 2025, over 80% of the top 50 U.S. general contractors — as ranked by Engineering News-Record — use its tools.
As for what’s next — IPO or acquisition talks? Winn won’t comment, though he confirmed the company expects to remain profitable and reinvest earnings back into product innovation.
Looking ahead: more than just drones
Though the word “drone” remains in its name, DroneDeploy is increasingly positioning itself as a field robotics and AI company. Winn noted that drones remain the company’s core, but customer demand is driving diversification. “We plan to continue to diversify over time in our other core reality capture products, including LiDAR sensors, mobile devices and fixed cameras,” he said.
This evolution has been underway for years, but the latest funding in the wake of its break-even puts it into sharper focus: DroneDeploy is betting its future not only on drones but on a broader suite of automated capture tools and AI-powered insights that can transform industrial job sites.
Customers like Layton Construction are already seeing the payoff.
“With Progress AI, we’re getting accurate site visibility in minutes – and using that to make faster, better calls across our portfolio,” said Jon Ferguson, VP of VDC at Layton in a prepared statement. “But what’s more important is where this is going… fewer manual workflows, tighter risk control and data we can trust to drive critical decisions at scale.”
Where to see what’s next
DroneDeploy will showcase its robotics and AI technology at multiple major 2025 drone events, including the Procore Championship in Napa Valley, CA (Sept. 11–14, 2025) next week. Then there’s DroneDeplo’ys own Horizons 2025 conference, which is set for late October in Southern California. There, the company promises “major product announcements” in robotics and AI.
While details remain under wraps, Winn hinted that Horizons will spotlight the next generation of site intelligence — continuing DroneDeploy’s journey from flying cameras to thinking robots.
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