Electronic Warfare Market (2025 - 2035)

ID: MRFR/AD/1023-CR
110 Pages
Shubham Munde
Last Updated: July 12, 2026
Global Electronic Warfare Market Research Report: Information By Capability (Electronic Attack, Electronic Protection, Electronic Support), By Platform (Air, Sea, Land, Space), By Equipment (Jammer Systems, Radar Warning Receivers, Counter-UAS EW Suites, Other Equipment), By End User (Air Force, Navy, Army), By Fit (OEM (New-Build), Retrofit / Upgrades) - Forecast to 2035
Electronic Warfare Market
Market Size
Forecast Period2025-2035
CAGR (2025-2035)9.45%
2025 Market SizeUSD 15.12 Billion
2035 Market SizeUSD 37.30 Billion
Key Players
BAE Systems
L3Harris Technologies
Northrop Grumman
RTX
Leonardo S.p.A.
Elbit Systems
Opportunities
  • Modular Open-Systems Architecture (MOSA) Adoption
  • Emerging-Market Indigenous EW Programs
  • EW-as-a-Service and Managed-Threat-Library Models
  1. 1 Market Overview |
    1. 1.1 Study Assumptions & Market Definition |
    2. 1.2 Scope of the Study |
    3. 1.3 Research Methodology
  2. 2 Market Summary & Key Takeaways
  3. 3 Market Dynamics |
    1. 3.1 Market Drivers Analysis | |
      1. 3.1.1 Expanding Counter-UAS Mission Requirements | |
      2. 3.1.2 GaN Amplifier Retrofit Cycles | |
      3. 3.1.3 Cognitive / AI-Enabled Threat Libraries | |
      4. 3.1.4 Space-Based EW Constellation Funding | |
      5. 3.1.5 NATO Spectrum-Superiority Mandates | |
      6. 3.1.6 Indo-Pacific Force-Posture Expansion | |
      7. 3.1.7 Multi-Domain Command Integration |
    2. 3.2 Market Restraints Analysis | |
      1. 3.2.1 Tightening Export-Control Regimes (ITAR/EAR) | |
      2. 3.2.2 Classification Barriers Limiting Tech Transfer | |
      3. 3.2.3 Supply-Chain Bottlenecks for RF Microelectronics | |
      4. 3.2.4 Spectrum-Management Regulatory Fragmentation | |
      5. 3.2.5 Extended Certification and Flight-Test Cycles |
    3. 3.3 Market Opportunity Analysis | |
      1. 3.3.1 Modular Open-Systems Architecture (MOSA) Adoption | |
      2. 3.3.2 Emerging-Market Indigenous EW Programs | |
      3. 3.3.3 EW-as-a-Service and Managed-Threat-Library Models | |
      4. 3.3.4 Directed-Energy and Electronic Warfare Convergence | |
      5. 3.3.5 Counter-Swarm Electronic Warfare Solutions |
    4. 3.4 Industry Value Chain Analysis |
    5. 3.5 Porter's Five Forces Analysis
  4. 4 Global Electronic Warfare Market Size & Forecast (2021–2035) |
    1. 4.1 Historical Market Size (2021–2025) |
    2. 4.2 Current & Forecast Market Size (2026–2035) |
    3. 4.3 Market Size by Revenue (USD Billion) |
    4. 4.4 Year-over-Year Growth Analysis
  5. 5 Segmentation Analysis |
    1. 5.1 By Capability | |
      1. 5.1.1 Electronic Attack | |
      2. 5.1.2 Electronic Protection | |
      3. 5.1.3 Electronic Support |
    2. 5.2 By Platform | |
      1. 5.2.1 Air | |
      2. 5.2.2 Sea | |
      3. 5.2.3 Land | |
      4. 5.2.4 Space |
    3. 5.3 By Equipment | |
      1. 5.3.1 Jammer Systems | |
      2. 5.3.2 Radar Warning Receivers | |
      3. 5.3.3 Counter-UAS EW Suites | |
      4. 5.3.4 Other Equipment |
    4. 5.4 By End User | |
      1. 5.4.1 Air Force | |
      2. 5.4.2 Navy | |
      3. 5.4.3 Army |
    5. 5.5 By Fit | |
      1. 5.5.1 OEM (New-Build) | |
      2. 5.5.2 Retrofit / Upgrades
  6. 6 Regional Analysis |
    1. 6.1 North America | |
      1. 6.1.1 United States | |
      2. 6.1.2 Canada | |
      3. 6.1.3 Mexico |
    2. 6.2 Europe | |
      1. 6.2.1 Germany | |
      2. 6.2.2 United Kingdom | |
      3. 6.2.3 France | |
      4. 6.2.4 Italy | |
      5. 6.2.5 Spain | |
      6. 6.2.6 Nordic Countries | |
      7. 6.2.7 Russia | |
      8. 6.2.8 Rest of Europe |
    3. 6.3 Asia-Pacific | |
      1. 6.3.1 China | |
      2. 6.3.2 India | |
      3. 6.3.3 Japan | |
      4. 6.3.4 South Korea | |
      5. 6.3.5 ASEAN | |
      6. 6.3.6 Rest of Asia-Pacific |
    4. 6.4 South America | |
      1. 6.4.1 Brazil | |
      2. 6.4.2 Argentina | |
      3. 6.4.3 Rest of South America |
    5. 6.5 Middle East & Africa | |
      1. 6.5.1 Saudi Arabia | |
      2. 6.5.2 UAE | |
      3. 6.5.3 South Africa | |
      4. 6.5.4 Egypt | |
      5. 6.5.5 Rest of MEA
  7. 7 Competitive Landscape |
    1. 7.1 Market Share Analysis (2025) |
    2. 7.2 Competitive Benchmarking Matrix |
    3. 7.3 Company Profiles | |
      1. 7.3.1 BAE Systems | |
      2. 7.3.2 L3Harris Technologies | |
      3. 7.3.3 Northrop Grumman | |
      4. 7.3.4 RTX (Raytheon) | |
      5. 7.3.5 Leonardo S.p.A. | |
      6. 7.3.6 Elbit Systems | |
      7. 7.3.7 Thales Group | |
      8. 7.3.8 Lockheed Martin | |
      9. 7.3.9 Saab AB | |
      10. 7.3.10 General Dynamics
  8. 8 Future Outlook & Strategic Recommendations (2026–2035) |
    1. 8.1 AI-Driven Autonomous Electronic Warfare Operations |
    2. 8.2 Platform-Agnostic and Distributed EW Architectures |
    3. 8.3 Electrification and Power-Budget Expansion |
    4. 8.4 Spectrum Governance and Electromagnetic Battle Management
  9. 9 Recent Developments & News
  10. 10 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
  11. 11 Report Scope & Methodology |
    1. 11.1 Study Period & Base Year |
    2. 11.2 Data Sources & Citations |
    3. 11.3 Abbreviations
  12. 1 LIST OF TABLES
  13. 2 LIST OF FIGURES

Segmentation Quick Reference

DimensionSub-SegmentsDominant SegmentFastest Growing Segment
CapabilityElectronic Attack, Electronic Protection, Electronic SupportElectronic Protection (37.8% share, 2025)Electronic Attack (9.92% CAGR)
PlatformAir, Sea, Land, SpaceAir (USD 5.30B, 2025)Space (10.10% CAGR)
EquipmentJammer Systems, Radar Warning Receivers, Counter-UAS EW Suites, Other EquipmentJammer Systems (42.3% share, 2025)Counter-UAS EW Suites (9.72% CAGR)
End UserAir Force, Navy, ArmyAir Force (41.5% share, 2025)Navy (9.55% CAGR)
FitOEM (New-Build), Retrofit / UpgradesRetrofit / Upgrades (59.0% share, 2025)Retrofit / Upgrades (9.23% CAGR)

 

 

Market Segmentation Overview

By Capability

Sub-SegmentKey Trend
Electronic AttackStand-in jamming via unmanned platforms is gaining operational priority; software-defined waveform agility is increasing mission flexibility.
Electronic ProtectionSelf-protection suite integration across 4th- and 5th-gen fighters; towed-decoy and DIRCM demand rising
Electronic SupportSIGINT modernization with wideband digital receivers; real-time emitter geolocation for targeting support

 

Electronic Protection remains the broadest capability segment because every combat platform requires baseline threat-warning and countermeasure systems. Electronic Attack is closing the gap as offensive electronic warfare transitions from dedicated assets to distributed, platform-agnostic mission sets integrated into multi-domain operations.

By Platform

Sub-SegmentKey Trend
AirFighter-pod refresh cycles (NGJ, Arexis); escort-jammer programs extending into unmanned wingman concepts
SeaIntegrated ship EW suites combining soft-kill and hard-kill cueing; fleet-level cooperative electronic warfare
LandTactical ground-force EW at brigade level; mobile counter-UAS electronic defeat systems proliferating
SpaceOrbital EW sensing payloads entering operational service; dedicated space electronic attack research accelerating

 

Air-based electronic warfare maintains revenue leadership due to the high per-unit cost of airborne pods and the sheer size of global fighter-fleet inventories. Space-based systems, while having a small revenue base today, are attracting disproportionate investment as great-power competition extends into the orbital domain.

By Equipment

Sub-SegmentKey Trend
Jammer SystemsTransition from mechanically steered to AESA-based jammers; multi-band simultaneous operation.
Radar Warning ReceiversDigital RWR architectures replacing crystal-video receivers; instantaneous-frequency-measurement upgrades
Counter-UAS EW SuitesRapidly deployable RF-denial systems for base and convoy protection; protocol-specific drone-link disruption
Other EquipmentExpendable decoys (BriteCloud-type), chaff/flare dispensers, directed-energy pre-cursor systems

 

Jammer systems command the largest equipment share, reflecting the capital-intensive nature of active electronic attack hardware. Counter-UAS EW suites represent the fastest-moving equipment category as the global drone threat outpaces kinetic-intercept capacity and cost-per-engagement economics.

By End User

Sub-SegmentKey Trend
Air ForceLargest EW spender; pod-centric procurement plus integrated-aperture investments on new-build fighters
NavyShip self-protection modernization; cooperative EW across carrier strike group architectures
ArmyGround-based tactical EW resurgence; electronic warfare platoons reactivated at brigade combat team level

 

Air forces dominate end-user demand because airborne electronic warfare systems carry the highest unit costs and the broadest mission-set requirements. Armies are the fastest-growing service-branch end user as ground-force electronic warfare—neglected for two decades—receives renewed doctrinal emphasis and dedicated funding lines.

By Fit

Sub-SegmentKey Trend
OEM (New-Build)EW suites designed-in from aircraft inception; deeply integrated apertures replacing bolt-on pods
Retrofit / UpgradesGaN amplifier insertion, software-defined receiver upgrades, and threat-library modernization

 

Retrofit programs dominate because the global installed base of combat platforms far exceeds new-production deliveries in any given year. Operators achieve near-generational capability leaps through targeted hardware swaps and software updates at a fraction of new-build cost, sustaining the retrofit segment's majority share across the forecast period.

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