Skip to report
LANSARY.Global industry intelligence Public evidence26
Defence industry · Global report · 1991–2035 · Reviewed 2026-07-14

Global Defence Spending: The Rearmament Cycle and the Industrial Base Behind It

Political commitments, legal authority, firm orders, qualified production, accepted deliveries and sustainment move on different clocks. Spending is the headline; conversion is the industrial story.S01

Separate financial scale from documentary and delivery status, follow one public programme end to end, and identify the next records that would strengthen or weaken a capacity decision.

From defence budget to usable capabilityTwo clocks · five proofs
AnnualBudget clock

Political commitments and fiscal authority can change in a single cycle.

132 monthsCapability clock

Mean start-to-IOC time in GAO's observed 43-programme cohort.S14

01Political commitmentSets directionS06
02Legal authorityEnables obligationS25
03Firm orderCreates binding demandS15
04Accepted deliveryProves customer acceptanceS17
05In-service supportSustains usable capabilityS15S16

One budget year can start the process.

Capability arrives on a programme clock.
SIPRI estimate · current 2025 US dollars
$2.887tn
World military expenditureS01
SIPRI's current-dollar estimate establishes the 2025 financial scale, not an equipment order total.
SIPRI real change · constant-dollar method
+41%
Real growth since 2016S01
The ten-year increase shows a durable cycle rather than a single-year nominal jump.
GAO observed cohort · 43 programmes
132 months
Mean start-to-initial-capability timeS14
The observed US major-programme cohort illustrates the capability clock without claiming a global average.

Read this in 90 seconds

  1. Budget clock — SIPRI estimates world military expenditure reached $2.887 trillion in 2025, 41% above 2016 in real terms. The financial cycle is large and sustained enough to reshape industrial demand, but the total includes much more than equipment procurement.S01
  2. Capability clock — GAO's 43-programme cohort took 132 months on average from programme start to initial operational capability. Annual budget decisions enter a multi-year design, qualification, production, acceptance and service-entry system.S14
  3. Decision unit — the useful unit is the programme status chain, not the political percentage or summit aggregate. Authority, obligation, firm order, accepted delivery and support each change the strength of a bid or capacity case.S06S07S15
  4. Regional split — Europe rose 14% in real terms in 2025, Asia and Oceania 8.1%, Africa 8.5%, while the Americas fell 6.6%. One global headline contains different fiscal, procurement and industrial cycles and cannot be read as a uniform market.S01
  5. Conversion proof — confirmation requires funded multi-year orders, qualified output, accepted deliveries and public sustainment evidence. Those records show whether political direction has crossed the industrial system instead of stopping at intent or finance.S07S15S17
Chapter 01 · Why now

Rising budgets do not automatically become capability

The answer is that the present rearmament cycle becomes durable industrial demand only where political commitments pass into legal authority, funded obligations, firm multi-year orders, qualified production, accepted deliveries and support. Those states move at different speeds. SIPRI's $2.887 trillion estimate proves the scale of the financial input; NATO's 2035 framework proves political direction; neither proves what has been ordered or fielded. The harder public evidence is further downstream: whether specifications remain stable, contracts endure, equipment passes acceptance and a support system exists. On that public-record test, the available evidence indicates that money is arriving faster than the published conversion record, although some programmes show that conversion can work.S01S06S07S14S15

That distinction is more than accounting hygiene. Defence expenditure includes people, operations, infrastructure, research and equipment, and national definitions are not identical. A budget can rise without a matching rise in industrial orders. A legal instrument can authorise finance without disbursing it. A contract can exist before serial output is qualified. A delivery announcement can precede ownership transfer and customer acceptance. Initial operational capability can follow years later, and sustainable availability can remain outside the public record. Treating these steps as synonyms produces false confidence precisely when companies and public buyers are making long-lived capacity decisions.S03S04S07S14

Three contemporary records expose the gap. The Hague agreement points towards 5% of GDP by 2035, but it explicitly combines at least 3.5% for core defence requirements with up to 1.5% for wider defence- and security-related investment. NATO's Ankara declaration then states more than $50 billion in new procurements, yet the public component record mixes investment plans, contracts, initiatives, a lease, quantities without values and conflicting delivery language. By contrast, the multinational tanker fleet offers smaller numbers but a clearer chain: formal launch, firm orders, ownership transfer, delivered aircraft, initial operational capability (IOC), full operational capability (FOC) and ongoing support. The documentary quality becomes stronger as the headline becomes more specific.S06S26S08S09S10S15S16S17

For a buyer, supplier or capital allocator, the decision is therefore not whether defence spending is rising. It is where the increase is durable and specified enough to justify a bid, capacity investment, partnership or deeper diligence—and which public conversion dependency could still break the case. The report does not rank forces or infer classified readiness. It follows public money and programme evidence only, keeps alliance, EU and national aggregates separate, and asks what each document actually proves.S03S04

X04 Commitment, order, output What changes when large defence figures are sorted by documentary and delivery status?
RecordStatusWhat the evidence says
Hague political commitmentPolitical targetAlliance-level political framework, split into core and wider categories; not a procurement target. · 5%S06
Ankara declared aggregateDeclared aggregate · lifecycle unresolvedDeclared aggregate, lifecycle unresolved — the summit declaration controls the exact figure, but public components cannot be reconciled into funded, awarded, ordered, accepted or delivered shares. · >$50bn declared · lifecycle unresolvedS26S08S09S10
EDA equipment expenditureRecorded expenditureRecorded expenditure — member-state equipment-procurement flow, not awarded backlog or delivery value. · €88bnS11
SAFE legal capacityLegal capacityLegal capacity — binding loan ceiling and eligibility framework, not cash, orders or deliveries. · up to €150bnS12S13
SAFE approved maximaApproved maximum allocationApproved maximum allocation — approved maxima across eighteen plans, not cash disbursement or supplier obligation. · €130.16bn approvedS25
SAFE first pre-financingPre-financing disbursedPre-financing disbursed — cash moved to four member states; supplier awards and equipment orders require later records. · €7.95bn disbursedS25
Accepted capability exampleFleet in serviceFleet in service — the multinational tanker record has passed order, transfer, delivery and public capability milestones for nine aircraft. · 9 aircraftS15S16S17
Definitions and scope. The rows use different units and periods and are not additive. · The Ankara declaration controls the exact aggregate; the public components do not support a lifecycle reconciliation. S06S08S09S10S11S12S13S15S16S17S25S26What this establishes. Political and financing figures are large, but the programme-level record supplies the stronger evidence of acceptance and service entry.
Chapter 02 · The long arc

How the peace dividend became a rearmament cycle

The long arc begins with a missing point. SIPRI cannot calculate a 1991 world total because it lacks a Soviet Union figure, so the series starts here at $1.415 trillion in constant 2024 dollars in 1992 rather than filling the gap. Real global spending then moved down through much of the 1990s. By 2001 the comparable total was about $1.297 trillion. This was the peace-dividend reset: not the disappearance of military industry, but a lower aggregate flow and a different expectation about demand duration. Capacity, skills and supplier structures inherited from the Cold War did not instantly vanish, yet the economic signal facing much of the industrial base had changed.S02S03

After 2001, spending rose through an expeditionary era in which operational demand, personnel, sustainment and protected mobility mattered alongside major platforms. The financial series records the resource input; it does not tell us how efficiently those resources became capability or how inherited stocks changed the result. That caveat matters across decades. A country drawing on installed fleets, existing depots and mature supply arrangements may obtain a different output from the same annual expenditure as one creating a new sovereign industrial capability. Spending is a flow through a system, not an inventory of what that system already owns.S02S03S04

The next breakpoint came in 2014. World military expenditure stood near $1.936 trillion in constant 2024 dollars as NATO leaders at Wales reaffirmed a 2% of GDP guideline and a separate expectation that more than 20% of defence budgets should go to major equipment and associated research and development. The dual test was revealing: how much was spent and how it was spent were already different questions. The commitment created direction, but implementation remained national, and a percentage guideline could not specify common equipment, aggregate orders or guarantee that industry would retain demand for long enough to expand.S02S05

The full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 then changed the industrial problem. The comparable world total rose from about $2.299 trillion in 2022 to $2.771 trillion in 2025, a real increase of roughly one fifth in three years. Europe recorded the sharpest broad regional acceleration, but the rise was not European alone: spending outside the United States increased 9.2% in real terms in 2025. The shock exposed the difference between drawing from inherited stocks and sustaining replenishment, yet aggregate expenditure still cannot reveal classified stock conditions, production bottlenecks or operational availability. Public analysis can identify the conversion challenge without mapping vulnerabilities.S01S02

The period from 2025 to 2035 is therefore a proof period, not simply the next budget decade. Hague raises the political ceiling and requires annual national plans, with a formal review in 2029. NATO's production plan says what must improve around demand aggregation, capacity, standards and cooperation. The outcome will be visible only in later records: national authority, multi-year obligations, stable specifications, qualified output, equipment accepted by customers and support sustained after delivery. If those records accumulate, the current spending cycle becomes an industrial cycle. If they do not, part of the political ambition will remain stranded between annual budgets and usable capability.S06S07

X01 The rearmament arc How did real world military expenditure move from the post-Cold War reset into the current cycle?
1992

Post-Cold War reset

First available world point after the missing 1991 Soviet Union total; spending subsequently fell through the 1990s.

$1,415bn · SIPRI historical estimateS02
Definitions and scope. Values are US$ billion at constant 2024 prices and exchange rates; the 2025 current-dollar headline is separate. · The 1991 world point is unavailable because Soviet Union expenditure is missing. S01S02S05What this establishes. The current cycle rebuilt after 2001, gathered policy direction after 2014 and accelerated after 2022.
Chapter 03 · The physical system

What the new money actually proves

What has changed since the first post-2022 surge is not only the volume of spending but the attempt to give demand duration and industrial form. EDA's 2024 record is one useful checkpoint: EU member states reported €343 billion of defence expenditure, including €88 billion of equipment procurement after a 39% annual rise and €13 billion of defence research and development. Those are recorded flows, not contract backlog or delivery value. EDA's 2025 figures—€381 billion total, equipment procurement above €100 billion and €17 billion of R&D—remain projections. Keeping the two years in their correct states avoids converting an institutional outlook into realised demand.S11

SAFE shows a financing mechanism moving through several more precise stages. The regulation creates legal loan capacity of up to €150 billion and sets eligibility and reporting conditions. By the retrieval cutoff, maximum amounts across 18 approved national plans summed to €130.16 billion. The Commission also recorded €7.95 billion of first pre-financing to four member states by 10 July 2026. This is genuine progression from legal capacity to approved allocation to cash movement. It still stops before the supplier chain: a loan tranche is not evidence of an equipment award, a firm production order, accepted delivery or readiness. The next public documents have to carry that burden.S12S13S25

NATO's production plan addresses the commercial reason this progression matters. Suppliers expand against credible duration, common requirements and orders, not an aggregate percentage alone. The plan calls for clearer demand signals, multinational and multi-year procurement, better capacity information, engagement across the lifecycle, attention to critical supply chains, and stronger standardisation and interoperability. Those mechanisms can reduce fragmentation and allow investment to be spread across a longer run. But the plan itself is policy. Whether it changes behaviour must be tested against contract duration, configuration stability, qualified throughput and accepted output.S07

Ankara is the sharpest warning against shortcut arithmetic. The summit declaration calls more than $50 billion a new-procurements aggregate, while the forum and speech records link it to production, cooperation, co-production and joint procurement. The public components include investment plans, mixed initiatives, disclosed contracts, a private lease, quantity-only items and value-undisclosed items. They do not provide a component table with common lifecycle states, inclusion rules or overlap tests. No ordered share or residual is therefore calculated. The safe result is more informative: a declared aggregate whose industrial meaning remains unresolved.S26S08S09S10

The multinational tanker fleet demonstrates both the value and the limit of milestone evidence. An initiative began in 2012 and the programme was formally launched in 2016. Firm orders grew as participants added requirements. NSPA records describe ownership transfer in the delivery process, providing evidence beyond a press announcement. The first aircraft arrived in 2020; the fleet reached IOC in 2023 and FOC in March 2026. NATO then published two statements that do not reconcile: on 7 July it announced delivery of the tenth aircraft; a programme page updated 9 July still recorded nine in service and one expected in summer. The report therefore leaves the tenth aircraft's ownership transfer, acceptance and service-entry status unresolved. Support continues through the multinational structure. The wider chain remains useful because each proven state is kept separate from the one that is disputed.S09S15S16S17

Even a functioning chain takes time. GAO's 2026 assessment found that 43 major US programmes which had reached IOC took 132 months on average from programme start; 17 programmes still awaiting IOC with published estimates averaged 149 months. Fifteen further programmes had no public IOC date or a classified date. These are not global production averages, and IOC is not a delivery date. They are nevertheless a disciplined reminder that fiscal calendars and capability calendars are structurally different. A political system can add money in one year; a complex programme may need a decade to pass through design, qualification, production, integration, acceptance and service entry.S14

X03 Follow one public programme Which document proves each step from initiative to accepted, supported capability?
Worked public programmeMultinational MRTT Fleet

Select a stage to see the dated public proof—and the claim it still cannot support.

Selected proof stage · 04Accepted deliveryfrom 2020

Accepted delivery

Published NSPA records describe transfer of ownership before delivery, separating acceptance from an announcement.S15S17

What this does not proveOwnership transfer before delivery is evidence beyond an announcement. It does not, by itself, prove readiness.
Definitions and scope. The chain uses public milestones only. Expected delivery remains distinct from ownership transfer, acceptance, service entry and sustainment; the tenth-aircraft record remains unresolved. S09S15S16S17What this establishes. The reader can inspect the decisive comparison without collapsing distinct evidence states.
Chapter 04 · The global map

Why the same spending cycle looks different by region

The 2025 map is broad but not uniform. Europe reached an estimated $864 billion and rose 14% in real terms. Asia and Oceania reached $681 billion and rose 8.1%. Africa reached $58.2 billion after an 8.5% rise. The Americas remained the largest broad region at $1.065 trillion but fell 6.6% after the United States' exceptional 2024 increase. The Middle East was estimated at $218 billion and broadly flat, with SIPRI marking the level as uncertain. These are current-dollar levels paired with real annual changes; they answer different questions and should not be placed on one additive scale.S01

Economic burden tells a different story again. The Middle East had the highest regional average at 3.8% of GDP, followed by Europe at 3.2%, Africa at 1.8%, Asia and Oceania at 1.6% and the Americas at 1.2%. A high burden can coexist with a smaller nominal market, while a very large economy can carry the greatest nominal spend with a lower average share. SIPRI also excludes countries where data are insufficient and uses its own regional taxonomy. The sensible comparison is therefore within each panel and definition—not a league table of military effectiveness.S01S02S03

North America supplies unmatched fiscal scale and the strongest public oversight trail, but it also shows the conversion problem in plain view. GAO's programme cohorts put elapsed time around a decade, while the US industrial strategy implementation plan links resilient supply chains, workforce readiness, flexible acquisition and allied cooperation. That framing matters because appropriations alone cannot qualify a supplier, stabilise a design or create an experienced production workforce. The region offers abundant financial and audit data; the buyer still has to trace the specific programme from authority through obligation, order, acceptance and support.S14S18

Europe is the central test of aggregation. NATO supplies requirements, standards and a political framework; EU institutions add expenditure data, regulation and financing; member states retain core budget and procurement authority. That creates both leverage and the risk of double counting. EDA's equipment-procurement expenditure, SAFE's loan stages and NATO's percentage commitment overlap with national systems but do not represent one pot. Progress should be judged by whether common requirements become stable multinational orders and accepted equipment, not by adding alliance, EU and national headlines.S06S07S11S12S13S25

Asia presents separate accounting and industrial models. Japan's FY2026 document distinguishes annual expenditure from contract-basis commitments. India's official review separates approvals above ₹3.84 lakh crore, signed contracts of ₹1.82 lakh crore and about ₹1.2 lakh crore of capital expenditure; a later administrative release reports ₹1.78 lakh crore of defence production in FY2025–26, with public and private contributions split. South Korea's budget separately identifies total defence and force-improvement programmes. These native categories are valuable precisely because they are not forced into a converted global order total. They show how much meaning can be lost when a budget headline is detached from its jurisdiction's accounting state.S19S20S21S24

The Gulf links acquisition to domestic industrial policy. Saudi Arabia's official report placed its military-industry localisation indicator at 24.89% in 2024 against a target above 50% by 2030. That is a programme measure, not proof of sovereign design authority, qualified local content or accepted output, but it establishes what the public owner intends to monitor. Australia offers a different model: a transparent long investment plan that connects strategy and capability priorities while leaving individual contracts and delivery milestones to later records. Africa belongs in the global picture because its real spending rose, yet sparse and excluded observations demand restraint. None of these regions should be used as filler for a universal narrative.S01S22S23

X02 One cycle, different regions Which region is largest, changing fastest, or carrying the highest economic burden?
2024–2025 · real terms

How quickly spending changed

Fastest increase: Europe rose 14% in real terms—the clearest immediate shift in the regional picture.

EuropeKey finding
+14%Fastest increase among the five broad SIPRI regions.S01
Asia and Oceania
+8.1%Growth continued a long-running regional rise.S01
Africa
+8.5%Third consecutive annual rise, subject to country exclusions.S01
Americas
−6.6%The regional fall reflects the United States after its large 2024 increase.S01
Middle East
+0.1%Broadly flat against an uncertain regional level.S01
Definitions and scope. Current-dollar levels, real annual changes and shares of GDP answer different questions and are never added together. SIPRI geography, exclusions and Middle East uncertainty remain attached. S01What this establishes. The reader can inspect the decisive comparison without collapsing distinct evidence states.
Chapter 05 · The constraint

Where defence production gets stuck

The industrial bottleneck is best understood as a chain rather than a list of scarce items. It begins with durable specified demand. A supplier deciding whether to add equipment, people or a second source needs more than a national percentage pledge: it needs a credible requirement, funding path, order duration and configuration. NATO's production plan addresses aggregation and multi-year procurement for this reason. The US strategy reaches a similar conclusion from another direction by tying resilient supply chains to workforce, acquisition practice and allied industrial cooperation. Demand quality and production quality are joined.S07S18

Authority and finance form the next gate. Different jurisdictions use requests, authorisations, appropriations, obligations, loan agreements and special funds in different ways. SAFE makes the distinction unusually visible because the legal ceiling, approved maximum allocations and first cash tranches can be observed separately. None is yet a supplier order. The same discipline applies to national plans and the Hague framework: a political commitment shapes expectations, while a binding obligation creates a different commercial signal. A capacity case should specify which document carries the demand and how long that authority lasts.S06S12S13S25

Specification and qualification then decide whether aggregated demand is truly repeatable. Common standards can widen a production run; diverging configurations can fracture it into small batches. Materials, components, software and sub-tier suppliers must satisfy programme requirements before assembly volume becomes useful output. Workforce, tooling, test equipment and process control have to mature together. Public strategy documents can name these functions without identifying sensitive facilities, stock levels or exploitable shortfalls. The relevant commercial question is whether the programme has a qualified system and an evidence-backed ramp, not whether a press release names a large nominal capacity.S07S18

Test and acceptance are where industrial output becomes customer evidence. The tanker programme is instructive because NSPA describes ownership transfer in connection with delivery, while NATO separately records service-entry milestones and the fleet in service. This prevents a forthcoming delivery from being mistaken for accepted capability. It also shows why sustainment belongs inside the conversion chain: a NATO-owned multinational fleet depends on management and support after the aircraft arrive. Training, spares, maintenance, configuration control and upgrades may not dominate a summit headline, but they shape whether accepted equipment remains usable.S15S16S17

The status chain also explains why one metric cannot govern every market. Equipment-procurement expenditure is closer to industrial demand than total military expenditure, but it is still a period flow rather than backlog. Signed contract value is stronger, but may cover services, options or long delivery profiles. Reported production value establishes output under the owner's definition, not acceptance or readiness. Delivered quantity is stronger again, but it may not reveal sustainment performance. The decision-maker needs a small set of programme-native proofs and a visible statement of what remains unknown.S03S04S11S15S20S21

That leads to a practical capacity test. First, identify the buyer and the exact capability requirement. Second, locate legal and fiscal authority in the relevant jurisdiction. Third, confirm whether a firm, funded, sufficiently long order exists and whether its specification is stable. Fourth, trace qualification, test and customer acceptance. Fifth, look for a public support arrangement that survives the delivery event. A positive answer at every stage does not guarantee returns or operational performance, but it turns a spending theme into a decision-ready industrial case. A gap tells the buyer where deeper diligence belongs.S07S13S15S17

X05 The industrial system Which linked industrial stages determine whether funded demand becomes accepted and supportable capability?
I01Durable demand
I02Authority and finance
I03Common specification
I04Qualified inputs
I05Workforce and plant
I06Test and acceptance
I07Delivery and support
Selected dependency

Durable demand

Clear requirements, funded duration and credible aggregation determine whether suppliers can underwrite expansion.S07

What it changes: Durable demand
Definitions and scope. The chain is public and strategic and identifies no sensitive facility or stock. · Capacity means qualified repeatable output, not nominal plant area or an announced rate. S06S07S13S15S16S17S18S25What this establishes. The bottleneck can move from demand and authority into standards, qualification, test, acceptance or support.
Chapter 06 · What to watch

Six tests that will show whether industry is catching up

The rearmament thesis should now be judged by progression, not by another round of bigger announcements. SIPRI's next annual releases will show whether real growth remains broad and whether the current cycle survives a slower fiscal year. NATO's annual plans and 2029 review will show how the 5% framework is composed. EDA can test whether projected equipment-procurement and R&D spending becomes reported outturn. The Commission's SAFE timeline can show whether financing advances into supplier obligations. Programme owners can show accepted deliveries and support milestones. Oversight bodies can show whether elapsed times begin to fall.S01S02S06S11S14S15S25

Each signal has an owner, a unit and a monitoring window. That is deliberate. Where no repeatable public measure exists, the report asks for a document rather than inventing a score. Ankara's unresolved aggregate, for example, should be revisited only if NATO or national buyers publish a component table with lifecycle states. Readiness remains outside the framework unless a competent public authority supplies a comparable definition and series. The aim is not to predict a classified operating picture; it is to identify the next public event that would strengthen or weaken the industrial case.S26S08S09S10S14

The most important confirmation would be simultaneous improvement on both clocks: funded multi-year orders and stable standards on the budget side, then qualified output, acceptance, delivery and sustainable support on the capability side. The thesis weakens if real spending narrows to a few states, new money remains outside industrial categories, financing stalls before contract, or delivery and elapsed-time data improve broadly enough to show that industry is catching up. That test keeps the argument falsifiable through 2030 rather than turning 2035 ambition into a foregone conclusion.S01S06S07S11S14S15S25

X06 What would prove it works? Which records should a buyer check over the next five years?
Evidence and owner
Now12m24m36m60m
Test that would change the judgement
6–12 months

Breadth of real spending growth

Who can evidence it: SIPRI military-expenditure programme

The annual SIPRI release can show whether the cycle remains geographically broad after the 2025 deceleration and whether growth outside the United States persists.S01S02

6m12m
Would change the judgementThe judgement weakens if real growth becomes concentrated in one or two states or the global series turns down for several releases.
6–36 months

NATO national plan composition

Who can evidence it: NATO and allied national governments

Annual plans and the 2029 review should reveal how the core and wider Hague components progress and whether capability targets anchor the spending path.S06

6m36m
Would change the judgementThe judgement weakens if plans rely mainly on the wider category, lack durable core funding or repeatedly defer capability-target delivery.
6–18 months

European procurement outturn

Who can evidence it: European Defence Agency

EDA's next reported data can confirm or revise the projected rise in equipment procurement and R&D without treating an estimate as realised expenditure.S11

6m18m
Would change the judgementThe judgement weakens if 2025 projections are revised materially lower or equipment-procurement growth stalls while total expenditure continues rising.
Now–24 months

SAFE from cash to supplier obligation

Who can evidence it: European Commission and participating member states

The Commission and member states can show whether approved plans and pre-financing become named, eligible supplier awards and firm equipment orders.S12S13S25

Now24m
Would change the judgementThe judgement weakens if large approved amounts and cash tranches fail to progress into disclosed, binding procurement obligations within the monitoring window.
Now–36 months

Accepted multinational deliveries

Who can evidence it: NATO and the NATO Support and Procurement Agency

Later NATO and NSPA records can resolve the tenth-aircraft conflict and distinguish delivery announcements from ownership transfer, acceptance, in-service evidence and support milestones.S09S15S16S17

Now36m
Would change the judgementThe judgement weakens if later fleet deliveries pass acceptance and enter supported service broadly on the published schedule without material slippage.
12–48 months

Programme cycle-time trend

Who can evidence it: US Government Accountability Office and Department of Defense

Future GAO assessments can show whether later US major-programme cohorts reach IOC faster and whether fewer programmes lack public milestone dates.S14

12m48m
Would change the judgementThe judgement weakens if observed start-to-IOC averages fall materially across later cohorts while public milestone coverage and delivery performance improve.
Definitions and scope. The range bars are monitoring windows, not forecast completion dates. · Accepted, supportable capability is the lagging test; agreements, funding and orders are earlier evidence. S01S02S06S11S12S13S25S09S15S16S17S14What this establishes. Evidence should progress from political direction and finance into firm orders, accepted deliveries, operational milestones and support.
Conclusion

The conversion test

Global defence spending has moved beyond a narrow post-2022 reaction. The real series, the breadth of 2025 regional growth and the 2035 political frameworks point to a durable rearmament cycle. Yet the industrial opportunity is smaller and more specific than the headline. Total expenditure includes non-industrial categories; alliance and EU aggregates overlap national systems; projections, financing ceilings and declarations sit upstream of programme proof. The strongest cases are those where the public record can be walked from authority to a funded, stable requirement, then through firm order, qualification, customer acceptance and support. The multinational tanker fleet shows that this chain is possible. Ankara's unresolved aggregate shows why it cannot be assumed.S01S06S07S09S11S13S15S25S26

For the next capacity decision, start with one programme rather than one percentage. Ask who owns the requirement, which document authorises the money, whether the obligation is binding and long enough, which specification must remain stable, what proves qualified output, what constitutes acceptance and who supports the equipment after delivery. Then monitor the named owner and cadence. If multi-year orders, accepted deliveries and cycle-time data improve together, industry is catching the budget clock. If financing and announcements rise while programme evidence stalls, the conversion gap remains the defining fact of the cycle.S07S14S15S17S25

The industrial signal is not the size of the promise; it is the strength of the public chain from authority to accepted, supportable capability.

Evidence · definitions · limits

Every consequential claim can be checked.

The evidence is open. Commitments, estimates and operating facts remain visibly different.

The global and regional spending series comes from SIPRI. The long-run chart uses constant 2024 US dollars and exchange rates; the 2025 headline and regional levels use current 2025 dollars. Real changes are not calculated from current-dollar levels. SIPRI's latest observations can include adopted budgets, budget estimates and reconstructed values, and its country definitions prioritise consistency over forced uniformity. The 1991 world point remains blank. Every regional label and exclusion follows SIPRI rather than a NATO, EU or commercial geography.S01S02S03S04

Policy and programme claims use official NATO, EU, national-government, GAO and NSPA records. Announcements remain announcements; projections remain projections. The Ankara declaration controls the exact aggregate, while its component lifecycle remains unresolved. The report makes no inference about classified readiness, operational vulnerabilities, facility locations, stock levels or exploitable capacity. Its conclusion is strategic and industrial: public demand is becoming more durable, but only programme-level evidence can prove conversion into accepted, supportable capability.S05S06S07S08S09S10S11S12S13S14S15S16S17S18S19S20S21S22S23S24S25S26

  • SIPRI estimates and national accounting definitions support trends better than fine cross-country equivalence, and the 1991 world point is unavailable.
  • NATO, EU and national figures overlap; they are kept in native units and are never added into a global procurement total.
  • The Ankara declaration controls the exact aggregate, but it cannot be publicly reconciled into funded, awarded, ordered, accepted or delivered components.
  • The worked programme does not expose every national appropriation, classified availability measure or operational readiness condition; two official NATO records leave the tenth aircraft's July 2026 status unresolved.
Filter by evidence role
S01Stockholm International Peace Research InstituteTrends in World Military Expenditure, 2025 · 2026-042025 world total, real change, regional totals and military burden
S02Stockholm International Peace Research InstituteSIPRI Military Expenditure Database, v1.2 · 2026-04-27constant-2024-dollar world and regional series for 1991–2025
S03Stockholm International Peace Research InstituteMilitary expenditure: sources and methods · retrieved 2026-07-13definition, estimation, revision and cross-country comparability limits
S04Stockholm International Peace Research InstituteMilitary expenditure: frequently asked questions · retrieved 2026-07-13spending as a financial input rather than a measure of arms purchases or capability
S05North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationWales Summit Declaration · 2014-09-052014 two-per-cent guideline and twenty-per-cent major-equipment guideline
S06North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationThe Hague Summit Declaration · 2025-06-25five-per-cent political investment commitment and 3.5/1.5 composition
S07North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationUpdated Defence Production Action Plan · 2025-02-13demand aggregation, industrial capacity and standardisation mechanisms
S08North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationNATO Summit Defence Industry Forum: Ankara programme · 2026-07-07Ankara forum purpose, sessions and announcement context
S09North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationTens of billions in new procurements revealed at the NATO Summit Defence Industry Forum in Ankara · 2026-07-07heterogeneous Ankara announcement record and the 7 July tenth-aircraft delivery announcement
S10North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationKeynote speech by NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the NATO Summit Defence Industry Forum · 2026-07-07first-party spending, investment, contract and output statements made at Ankara
S11European Defence AgencyDefence Data 2024–2025 · 2025-09EU member-state expenditure, equipment procurement, R&D and 2025 projections
S12Council of the European UnionEuropean defence readiness · updated 2026Readiness 2030 enabling framework and SAFE policy status
S13European UnionRegulation (EU) 2025/1106 establishing the Security Action for Europe instrument · 2025-05-27legal authority and maximum SAFE loan capacity
S14United States Government Accountability OfficeWeapon Systems Annual Assessment: DOD Is Not Yet Well-Positioned to Field Systems with Speed · 2026-06-11programme cohorts and elapsed time from programme start to initial operational capability
S15North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationStrategic airlift capabilities · updated 2026-07-09multinational tanker fleet launch, orders, deliveries, IOC, FOC and in-service status
S16NATO Support and Procurement AgencyMultinational MRTT Fleet factsheet · 2025multinational memorandum, purchase, order and delivery milestones
S17NATO Support and Procurement AgencyMultinational MRTT Fleet continues to grow · 2021-02-23ownership transfer and delivery evidence for the fifth fleet aircraft
S18United States Department of DefenseDOD lays out plan to implement National Defense Industrial Strategy · 2024-10-29resilient supply chains, workforce, acquisition and allied production priorities
S19Japan Ministry of DefenseDefense Programs and Budget of Japan: Overview of FY2026 Budget · 2025-12-26separate annual-expenditure and contract-basis presentations
S20Government of India Press Information BureauYear End Review 2025: Ministry of Defence · 2025-12separate approvals, signed contracts and capital expenditure figures
S21Government of India Press Information BureauDefence production reaches record high in FY 2025–26 · 2026-06-17production value, annual change and public/private contribution split
S22Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaSaudi Vision 2030 Annual Report 2025: Executive Summary · 2026military-industry localisation indicator and 2030 target
S23Australian Department of DefencePreparing Australia for future strategic challenges · 2026-04-17long-plan investment framing and capability-delivery sequencing
S24Republic of Korea Ministry of National Defense2026 Defence Budget · 2026total budget and separately identified force-improvement programme
S25European CommissionSAFE: Security Action for Europe · updated 2026-07-10approved national-plan maxima, loan agreements and first pre-financing disbursements
S26North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationThe Ankara Summit Declaration · 2026-07-08controlling declaration for NATO's more-than-$50-billion new-procurements aggregate
Showing 26 of 26 sources
Questions readers ask
How large is the current defence-spending cycle?

SIPRI estimates global military expenditure reached $2.887 trillion in 2025, the eleventh consecutive annual increase.

Does NATO's 5% framework equal procurement demand?

No. It is a political investment framework; appropriations, obligations, orders and deliveries require separate evidence.

What proves that spending has become capability?

Public evidence of legal authority, signed orders, qualified production, equipment passing acceptance, delivered systems and sustainable support.

Does the report assess classified readiness?

No. It stays at the public strategic, financial and industrial level and avoids operational vulnerability inference.

Use the report

Stress-test one capacity bet against the public programme record.

Name the capability market, programme, supplier footprint or capacity proposal. Lansary will separate commitment, authority, order, production, delivery and public sustainment evidence.

Test a capacity decision