Royal Navy to Acquire Twenty Uncrewed Surface Vessels for Autonomous Warfare Testing
New fleet of drone boats will serve as an experimental maritime proving ground for tactics, training, and next-generation naval technology
The Royal Navy is preparing to acquire a fleet of twenty uncrewed surface vessels as part of a major effort to accelerate the development of autonomous maritime capabilities and experiment with new forms of naval warfare.
The vessels, known as USVs, will form a dedicated test and development flotilla designed to operate alongside traditional warships.
Rather than replacing existing frigates or destroyers, the autonomous craft will act as an experimental proving ground where naval teams can trial emerging technologies, refine operational tactics, and test new concepts at sea without putting personnel at risk.
The programme is being pursued under an initiative intended to help transform the Royal Navy into what defence planners describe as a “hybrid fleet,” combining conventional crewed ships with increasingly capable unmanned systems.
Officials say the approach is aimed at improving flexibility and expanding the Navy’s operational capacity in an era of rapidly evolving maritime threats.
According to project planning documents, the twenty vessels will support training, warfare development, and capability experimentation across the service’s surface fleet.
The platforms are expected to feature open architecture designs that allow sensors, autonomy software, and mission systems to be upgraded or replaced as technologies mature.
The vessels will initially enter service at a mid-level technology readiness stage, enabling engineers and naval operators to gradually incorporate more advanced autonomous functions through iterative development.
This phased approach is intended to allow the Navy to experiment with multiple concepts while rapidly adapting lessons learned from real-world testing.
The USV flotilla will also support operational trials in British waters and beyond, helping commanders assess how autonomous vessels might be integrated into future missions such as surveillance, escort operations, mine countermeasures, and maritime security patrols.
Recent demonstrations have already shown how groups of unmanned boats could operate in coordinated formations alongside naval ships.
In one exercise, remotely piloted vessels shadowed Royal Navy patrol ships during a simulated maritime encounter, providing data and testing how drone craft could support fleet operations from long distances.
Defence planners increasingly see autonomous maritime systems as a critical force multiplier, allowing navies to extend their reach, gather intelligence, and conduct risky operations while preserving crewed ships for higher-value missions.
The new flotilla is expected to serve as a central laboratory for refining those capabilities and shaping how future naval forces will operate.
By creating a permanent test fleet dedicated to experimentation, the Royal Navy aims to accelerate innovation and ensure that emerging technologies—from artificial intelligence to advanced sensor networks—can be rapidly integrated into frontline maritime operations.