Amsterdam's Avalor AI Secures €2M for Autonomous Military Systems
- Nov 7, 2025
- 1 min read
Updated: Nov 15, 2025
Avalor AI, an Amsterdam defense tech company, builds artificial intelligence for autonomous military operations. The startup launched in 2021 and has raised €2 million to date.
The company's flagship product is called Nexus. This platform gives unmanned vehicles the ability to plan and execute missions across air, land, and sea environments. These systems operate with minimal human supervision once deployed.
According to a recent publication, Nexus handles real-world battlefield challenges, including electronic warfare jamming. The software integrates with NATO systems to coordinate fire support, track friendly forces, and maintain interoperability between allied units.
Military customers use the platform for surveillance, strike missions, relay operations, and decoy tactics. A centralized interface lets operators control everything from one location. The human-machine design keeps people involved in key decisions while automating routine tasks.
Avalor built several advanced capabilities into Nexus. The system tracks objects in real time, assesses damage after strikes, and controls drone swarms intelligently. One operator can manage multiple unmanned systems operating simultaneously across different domains.
The company also offers simulation software for training purposes. Military personnel can practice operating autonomous systems in virtual environments that mirror actual combat conditions. This feature helps forces develop new tactics before deploying hardware.
Avalor addresses a critical military need as armed forces adopt more unmanned platforms. Coordinating dozens of drones, ground robots, and surface vessels manually becomes impossible. Automated mission management solves this scalability problem.
The funding will support the continued development of Nexus and expansion into new markets. Defense buyers increasingly demand autonomous solutions that work in contested environments where GPS and communications face disruption. Avalor's focus on electronic warfare resistance positions it well for these requirements.
