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After adjustment for inflation, government spending on defence is expected to increase at a compound annual rate of 7.8% over the five-year period through 2025-26, to reach circa £60.2 billion. Following the 2010 general election, post-financial crisis austerity measures imposed by the government to cut public expenditure, and ultimately assist with stabilising a flagging economy, resulted in a sustained pressure on Ministry of Defence (MoD) finances - that is, from 2010-11 through 2016-17 inclusive, government spending on defence declined year-on-year in real terms. Published in October 2010, the government's Strategic Defence and Security Review restructured the UK's national security policy, focussing on the reduction of MoD expenditure.In 2017-18, government spending on defence recorded a real term increase of 2% - this represented 2.1% of GDP, exceeding the NATO 2% target and achieving the target for the eight-consecutive year. The largest single factor in explaining an inflation in the MoD's expenditure budget in 2017-18 was an increase in the cost of constructing the Dreadnought submarines, designed to carry the UK's Trident nuclear missiles and due to begin entering service from the early 2030s - the total budget for procurement of Dreadnought alone is circa £31 billion, with an additional £10 billion of contingency held by HM Treasury.In real terms, government expenditure on defence increased 1.5% in 2018-19. However, despite planned growth (3.3%) in resource expenditure, through the agency of additional funding committed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer for investment in cyber capabilities and anti-submarine warfare technologies, planned capital expenditure limits, in real terms, were stated to decline by 11.1%, resulting in growth limitation in the government's overall defence budget. The MoD had been urged to "scale back" defence spending to plug an affordability gap of up to £15 billion in the department's multi-year equipment and capital budget. Nevertheless, the government's spending on defence increased by 2.1% in 2019-20, largely driven by additional funding committed by the government to pay for exceptional Dreadnought costs running above previously budgeted levels, in addition to funding being committed to reshape and or defer defence projects. In 2020-21, government spending on defence was largely been pre-determined, somewhat mitigating the potential budgetary implications of an exogeneous economic shock spurred by the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, and increased by 3.8% year-on-year.In November 2020, the British government approved the largest rise in its defence budget since the end of the Cold War, with £16.5 billion in additional funding made available for spending on shipbuilding, space, cyber, research and other sectors over the next four years. The government said military modernisation will be underpinned by a record investment of at least £1.5 billion extra and £5.8 billion in total on military research and development, including a commitment to further invest in the future combat air system. In large part, additional funding to support the ongoing military modernisation programme is presumed to support current year defence spend.In addition to this, on the morning of 24 February 2022, President Vladimir Putin announced that Russia was initiating a "special military operation" in the Donbas region, and proceeded to launch a full-scale invasion into Ukraine. With war having returned to European soil, many Western economies have announced heightened defence budgets as a response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Hence, the UK government's expenditure on defence increased by 8.4% in 2022-23. Defence expenditure has continued to climb since, as bouyouing tensions in the Middle East threaten to scale into a wider conflict, particularly following the 12-day war between Iran-Israel war in February 2026 and following attacks on March 2026.
Curious about what drives these trends? IBISWorld's analyst coverage on the government spending on defence includes detailled analysis on the current performance, outlook and industries affected.
2007-2032
This report analyses total defence spending by the United Kingdom. The data is sourced from Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses (PESA) 2020, and preceding annual publications, published by HM Treasury. Total defence spending is calculated as resource departmental expenditure limits excluding depreciation plus capital departmental expenditure limits. The data is presented in real terms (i.e. adjusted for inflation) using HM Treasury's GDP deflator (2019-20 base = 100) supplied by the Office for National Statistics. Figures are afforded in pound sterling billions over financial years (i.e. April to March). Forecast data is sourced from HM Treasury's PESA 2020 and IBISWorld.
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| Industry | Country | Last 5-yr CAGR | Forecast 5-year CAGR | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shipbuilding in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Weapon & Ammunition Manufacturing in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Aircraft, Engine & Parts Manufacturing in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Biometrics Scan Technology Development in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Explosives Manufacturing in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Lithium Battery Manufacturing in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Fabricated Metal Product Repair & Maintenance in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Aircraft Repair, Maintenance & Overhaul in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Boat Repair & Maintenance in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Satellite Telecommunications Activities in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Measuring, Testing & Navigational Equipment Manufacturing in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
| Electronic & Optical Equipment Repair in the UK |
|
XX% | XX% | $XX |
When the stakes are high, you need intelligence that cuts through the noise—wherever you work.
The government spending on defence in the UK in 2026 was 60.22 £ billion.
The government spending on defence in the UK grew by 7.84% in 2026.
IBISWorld’s data and analysis on government spending on defence in the UK includes forecasted growth rates over the next five years.