Draganfly Inc.'s SEC filings document the company's foreign private issuer reports and current disclosures for a drone solutions and UAV systems business. Its Form 6-K reports, furnished under Exchange Act Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16, attach press-release exhibits covering financial results, shareholder update calls, product selections, defense and public safety activity, distributor agreements and technology integrations involving platforms such as Flex FPV, Commander 3XL, Apex and Heavy Lift.
The filing record also captures formal disclosures tied to reported operating updates, exchange-traded securities and recurring communications with shareholders. These documents describe Draganfly's UAV products and services, partnerships, autonomous systems work and public-company reporting as a Canadian issuer.
DRAGANFLY INC. Schedule 13G/A shows Citadel-related entities and Kenneth Griffin reporting shared beneficial ownership of common shares. Citadel Advisors LLC, Citadel Advisors Holdings LP and Citadel GP LLC each report 1,543,424 shares (4.2%). Citadel Securities LLC and related entities report 392,038 shares (1.1%). Mr. Griffin reports 1,935,462 shares (5.3%). The filing states 36,495,939 Shares outstanding as of March 24, 2026 (per Exhibit 99.1 to a Form 40-F). Reported holdings are shown with shared voting and dispositive power. The filing is signed by Seth Levy as authorized signatory and as attorney-in-fact for Mr. Griffin.
Draganfly Inc. reported record first quarter 2026 results, with revenue rising to $2,312,353 from $1,547,715 a year earlier and $1,912,199 in Q4 2025. Gross margin was 15.0%, compared with 20.0% in Q1 2025.
The company posted a net loss of $5,628,866, deeper than the $3,424,825 loss in Q1 2025, reflecting higher operating expenses of $7,963,223. Other income of $1,986,596, including a favorable $1,047,731 change in fair value of derivative liability, partially offset operating losses.
Total assets increased to $161,135,816 as of March 31, 2026 from $101,387,873 at December 31, 2025, and shareholders’ equity grew to $155,782,440 from $96,596,795. Cash and cash equivalents improved by $57,182,900 in Q1 2026, compared with a decline of $4,126,306 in Q1 2025.
Draganfly Inc. reported Q1 2026 results showing higher revenue but continued losses alongside a major equity raise. Revenue for the three months ended March 31, 2026 was $2.31 million, up from $1.55 million a year earlier, driven mainly by product sales at Dronelogics.
Gross profit was $0.35 million, with gross margin slipping to 15.0% from 20.0% as cost of sales grew faster than revenue and included a $0.11 million inventory write-down. Selling, general and administrative expenses rose sharply to $7.72 million, reflecting higher employee, travel, office and development costs.
The company recorded a net loss of $5.63 million (basic and diluted loss per share of $0.17), compared with a $3.42 million loss in Q1 2025. Results include a non‑cash $1.05 million gain from revaluing the derivative warrant liability and a $0.11 million inventory write‑down.
Liquidity strengthened significantly. Cash and cash equivalents increased to $147.34 million from $90.16 million at year‑end, mainly due to a February 23, 2026 public offering of common share and pre‑funded warrant units that generated $68.28 million in gross proceeds and about $60.13 million in net proceeds. Working capital rose to $154.36 million, and total assets reached $161.14 million.
Shareholders’ equity increased to $155.78 million, supported by financing activity and warrant exercises, while the derivative liability tied to U.S.‑dollar prefunded warrants declined to $0.33 million after exercises and fair value adjustments. The company continues to operate as a going concern under IFRS, noting dependence on future profitable operations and ongoing access to capital.
Draganfly Inc. filed a Form 6-K highlighting that two additional U.S. Department of War units have selected its Flex FPV drone systems. These selections underscore ongoing demand for mission-ready FPV platforms used for training, operational readiness, and tactical awareness in demanding defense environments.
The Company emphasizes that its Flex FPV drones are designed for rapid deployment, agility, and adaptability across varied operational scenarios. Draganfly notes that these wins add to its growing defense momentum, alongside work in ISR, logistics, and other drone applications, leveraging more than 25 years of experience in unmanned systems.
Draganfly Inc. filed a Form 6-K highlighting that two additional U.S. Department of War units have selected its Flex FPV drone systems. These selections underscore ongoing demand for mission-ready FPV platforms used for training, operational readiness, and tactical awareness in demanding defense environments.
The Company emphasizes that its Flex FPV drones are designed for rapid deployment, agility, and adaptability across varied operational scenarios. Draganfly notes that these wins add to its growing defense momentum, alongside work in ISR, logistics, and other drone applications, leveraging more than 25 years of experience in unmanned systems.
Draganfly Inc. has signed an exclusive master distributor agreement with Japanese drone maker ACSL to bring NDAA-compliant SOTEN drones to the Canadian market and collaborate on technology integration between their platforms.
The partnership targets Canada’s commercial drone market, which is projected to reach $10 billion USD by 2030. SOTEN is a compact, multi-mission drone with four swappable camera options and a secure-by-design architecture that complements Draganfly’s Apex, Commander 3XL, and Heavy Lift drones, which support payloads from 6.6 to over 100 lbs. Technical integration will allow certain Draganfly drones to use SOTEN camera payloads and the ACSL TAITEN smart controller, giving pilots cross-platform interoperability. The SOTEN platform will be available across Canada exclusively through Draganfly beginning in June 2026.
Draganfly Inc. reported that CEO Cameron Chell appeared before Canada’s Standing Senate Committee on National Security, Defence and Veterans Affairs to discuss how domestic industry can strengthen national defence capability. He stressed that modern conflict depends on speed, scalability, and adaptable industrial capacity, not just individual weapons systems.
Chell outlined three priorities for Canada’s Defence Industrial Strategy: treating Canadian technology companies as strategic national assets, creating clear economic pathways to turn successful pilot programs into purchase orders and deployable capability, and building integrated ecosystems that connect industry, operators, and supply chains. Draganfly highlighted its more than 25 years of experience delivering drone solutions for public safety, defence, and critical infrastructure across North America.
Draganfly Inc. filed a report highlighting that CEO Cameron Chell will appear on Fox Business’ “Making Money with Charles Payne” on April 10, 2026 during the 2:00 p.m. hour. He is scheduled to discuss the Iran conflict and how drone technology is reshaping modern warfare and global defense strategies.
The company emphasizes themes such as drones as force multipliers in reconnaissance, logistics, and tactical operations, the importance of domestic manufacturing and secure supply chains, and the need for scalable, rapidly deployable unmanned systems. Draganfly positions itself as a recognized global authority with mission-ready technologies, long-standing government relationships, and a strong balance sheet supporting participation in expanding defense and public safety markets.
Draganfly Inc. issued a corporate update emphasizing growing momentum in defense and public safety drones, supportive industry trends, and a strong financial position. Management notes that recent share-price volatility does not reflect the company’s balance sheet strength or expanding defense engagements.
The company reports current cash of approximately $145 million, giving it flexibility to pursue growth while its market value remains only modestly above this cash level. Draganfly highlights recent milestones with U.S. and allied defense organizations and participation in key drone programs, alongside rising global demand for autonomous and FPV systems.
For 2026, priorities include scaling production and delivery, building a domestic NDAA-compliant supply chain, deepening government and tier-one contractor relationships, advancing internal system and software development, pursuing select strategic acquisitions, and maintaining disciplined capital deployment.
Draganfly Inc. reported record 2025 results with higher sales but larger losses. Total revenue for the year ended December 31, 2025 was $7,731,163, up 17.8% from 2024, driven mainly by a 28.0% increase in product sales to $6,869,815, while services revenue fell 27.7% to $861,348.
Despite growth, profitability weakened. Gross profit for 2025 was $1,321,336, down 5.5%, with gross margin declining from 21.3% to 17.1%, affected by non-cash inventory write-downs. Net loss was $22,981,079 and comprehensive loss was $22,979,770, both significantly higher than 2024, mainly due to higher office, travel, and employee expenses and warrant derivative fair value changes.
Fourth quarter 2025 revenue rose 18.5% year over year to $1,912,199, but reported gross margin was just 4.5%. Financial strength improved, with cash and cash equivalents increasing by $83,904,412, total assets reaching $101,387,873, working capital $95,242,327, and shareholders’ equity $96,596,795 as of December 31, 2025. The company highlighted multiple new defense, telecom, and border-security contracts and partnerships, and plans a shareholder update call on March 24, 2026.
Draganfly Inc. files its Annual Report on Form 40-F reporting consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with IFRS and stating 29,344,775 common shares outstanding as of the close of the period covered. All dollar amounts are in Canadian dollars; the exchange rate on December 31, 2025 was U.S.$1.00 = C$1.3706.
Management concluded that disclosure controls and internal control over financial reporting were effective as of December 31, 2025. The filing lists audit and related fees billed to the company for fiscal 2025 and 2024, and discloses contractual obligations totaling $4,616,315 due within one year and $174,763 due in one to five years.