Full-Time

Supporting Tech Lead

Maritime

Posted on 5/10/2026

Helsing

Helsing

501-1,000 employees

AI-powered defense software for autonomous systems

No salary listed

London, UK + 4 more

More locations: Paris, France | Exeter, UK | Berlin, Germany | Munich, Germany

In Person

Category
Software Engineering (1)
Required Skills
Assembly
Requirements
  • Have built, integrated, tested, and deployed complex electromechanical systems in real operational environments, not in simulation or on paper.
  • Make systems-level engineering decisions that span mechanical, electrical, and embedded software boundaries with clarity and confidence.
  • Resolve technical trade-offs under ambiguity, document your reasoning transparently, and bring a multi-disciplinary team to a shared decision.
  • Have led design reviews and coordinated technical output across engineering teams with different domain specialisms.
  • Know when a design is ready to build and when it requires further iteration, and have the judgement to act on that distinction.
Responsibilities
  • Own the Production Pathway: Ensure every design decision accounts for manufacturing, assembly, and test from the outset, so that unit 37 can be built identically to unit 1.
  • Own design documentation, version control, and assembly instructions to a standard complete enough for someone outside the room to build from.
  • Support supplier selection and qualification, identifying volume-available components, custom-development requirements, and single-source risks that could affect programme delivery.
  • Drive the transition from engineer-built prototype to a fully documented, production-ready build across the 40-unit programme.
  • Lead the integration of all subsystems, including the flight-controller board, edge compute, hydrophone array, satcom, network router, and sensor suite, ensuring each interface is clearly defined and validated.
  • Coordinate with the Software Tech Lead to ensure the on-glider software stack and hardware requirements remain mutually consistent throughout the development cycle.
  • Define and execute the test strategy from bench through tank trials to open-water sea trials, capturing findings and iterating the design accordingly.
  • Apply whole-system UUV knowledge to resolve competing design approaches, drawing on what has been validated at depth and what is known to scale to production.
  • Assess available options with the information at hand, make well-reasoned calls, communicate the rationale clearly to the team, and keep the programme moving.
  • Ensure the team's collective expertise in mechanical, electrical, and embedded domains converts into forward momentum.
  • Work with the existing technical team to advance Helsing's maritime products from current concept to a fully buildable, producible system.
  • Own trade-off decisions that span mechanical, electrical, and embedded software boundaries, articulating reasoning with enough clarity to secure team alignment.
  • Distinguish between designs that are ready to build and those that need further iteration, preventing the programme from stalling in unnecessary refinement cycles.
  • Embed scaled-manufacturing thinking from the outset, not as a downstream consideration.
Desired Qualifications
  • Direct experience with UUVs, AUVs, or underwater gliders, including buoyancy-driven platforms, variable buoyancy systems, or underwater propulsion.
  • Familiarity with subsea communications (Iridium SBD), underwater acoustics, or edge compute platforms such as Jetson.
  • Experience delivering within a defence or defence-adjacent programme, including LARS and vessel operations.

Helsing develops AI and software for military use across air, land, sea, and sub-surface domains, designed to integrate with existing or new hardware. Its products include drones like HF-1, HX-2, and CA-1 Europa, underwater swarms such as SG-1 Fathom, and software like Altra, Lura AI, and Cirra for sensor fusion and electronic warfare, all capable of operating without GPS in challenging environments. The company differentiates itself by a software-first approach and by selling its technology exclusively to democratic governments, working with NATO and European defense contractors through global partnerships. Helsing aims to empower democracies with AI-enabled, integrated defense capabilities—from reconnaissance and situational awareness to autonomous weapons and cyber-electronic warfare support, while aiding allied nations such as Ukraine.

Company Size

501-1,000

Company Stage

Series E

Total Funding

$2.7B

Headquarters

Munich, Germany

Founded

2021

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • European DefenseTech funding doubled to $2.3B in 2025, fueling Helsing's $1.2B raise to $18B valuation.
  • Keybotic acquisition adds Keyper robotic dogs, expanding land autonomy after Blue Ocean underwater buy.
  • Plymouth University MOU on March 11, 2026, accesses UK marine research for SG-1 Fathom scaling.

What critics are saying

  • Exaggerated AI dogfight claims fail real tests, causing NATO contract losses within 6-12 months.
  • Leaked documents expose AI algorithms, letting Anduril undercut Helsing in European bids immediately.
  • Keybotic integration fails, triggering Bundeswehr and Airbus terminations in 6-12 months.

What makes Helsing unique

  • Helsing integrates AI into Eurofighter Typhoon and Saab Gripen radar systems for real-time battlefield decisions.
  • Helsing manufactures HX-2 kamikaze drones and SG-1 Fathom underwater swarms exclusively for democracies.
  • Helsing's Altra platform fuses sensor data across air, land, and sea domains for multi-domain autonomy.

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Benefits

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Headcount

6 month growth

-3%

1 year growth

0%

2 year growth

-3%
University of Plymouth
Mar 11th, 2026
University and Helsing forge new partnership to drive innovation.

University and Helsing forge new partnership to drive innovation. The organisations sign a Memorandum of Understanding to turbocharge the UK's marine autonomy industry. Media and Communications Manager 11 March 2026 The University of Plymouth and Europe's largest defence technology company, Helsing, have signed an agreement which will see them collaborating on a range of initiatives to drive progress in marine autonomy. Through a new Memorandum of Understanding, the two organisations will work together on research, innovation and testing opportunities and create highly skilled jobs for the region's marine autonomy sector. The signing comes just six months after the official opening of Helsing's first UK Resilience Factory located in Plymouth which is part of the company's £350 million commitment to the UK. University staff and students played a leading role in the opening, and the two organisations have been working increasingly close together since then. They are both members of the Team Plymouth initiative to attract investment to the area. The resulting agreement will see the University and Helsing promote cooperation and collaboration in knowledge exchange and research and development, as well as sharing access to research and testing facilities. They will explore opportunities to cooperate in talent acquisition and skills pipelines, through programmes such as apprenticeships and hiring schemes. And they will encourage the growth of the University's directorates and curriculum, with specific focus on marine autonomy, as well as exploring philanthropic efforts that promote vocational pathways into the regional maritime defence sector. Their aim is to ensure a good education leads to a good local job in a growing and exciting industry. The partnership was signed at Oceanology International 2026, the world's premier biennial ocean technology exhibition, where the University and Helsing are part of a concerted effort to promote Plymouth's status as the UK's National Centre for Marine Autonomy to a global audience. Helsing's arrival in its city last autumn was a clear demonstration of Plymouth's excellence and global influence in marine autonomy. Ever since, University of Plymouth has been exploring ways of working more closely and signing this agreement is an important step on its collaborative journey. I am excited about the possibilities it will unlock for its staff, students and graduates and hope it will provide further evidence that coming to study in Plymouth can ultimately lead to opportunities to work with - and for - some of the world's most forward-thinking and innovative employers. Helsing is building the advanced technology to ensure allied navies can dominate the underwater battlespace. University of Plymouth is proud to call Plymouth home following the opening of its Resilience Factory six months ago, and its growing partnership with the University of Plymouth will connect University of Plymouth with world-class research, talent and testing facilities on its doorstep. Together University of Plymouth look forward to enhancing Plymouth's reputation as a global leader in maritime autonomy, creating new jobs and opportunities in the city, and helping to safeguard British and allied interests at sea. Ned Baker UK Managing Director at Helsing Ned Baker and Professor Richard Davies sign a Memorandum of Understanding at Oceanology International 2026

Novobrief
Jan 12th, 2026
Helsing acquires Keybotic as Europe pushes for defence autonomy after €600M raise

Barcelona-based robotics startup Keybotic has been acquired by German defence company Helsing in a deal reflecting Europe's renewed focus on homegrown defence technologies and critical infrastructure protection. Founded in 2020, Keybotic developed Keyper, an autonomous robotic dog designed for industrial settings after winning the DARPA Robotics Challenge. The acquisition follows Helsing's established pattern of building autonomous defence capabilities across land, air and maritime domains. Munich-based Helsing, founded in 2021, raised €600 million in June 2025 and has previously acquired Blue Ocean, a startup specialising in autonomous underwater vehicles. The company describes its mission as protecting liberal democracies in an increasingly volatile world. The Keybotic acquisition brings agile autonomous robotics into Helsing's expanding defence ecosystem, supporting Europe's push for security sovereignty.

Deutsche Messe AG
Jan 5th, 2026
Defense robotics can significantly reduce the risk to infantry

Defense robotics can significantly reduce the risk to infantry. Robot ethics, which is already challenging in peacetime, focuses on the distinction between good and evil with the ongoing development of combat robots in a conflict-ridden world. Recent media reports indicate that Ukraine has approved the use of the first ground-based combat robots equipped with Droid NW 40 grenade launchers, and other European countries are also demonstrating their assertiveness with their own defense robotics and drone innovations, supported by autonomous combat robots. The "Droid NW 40" from Ukrainian manufacturer DevDroid, an unmanned ground vehicle (UGV), is designed to be equipped with both the US Mk-19 and Ukrainian AGL-53 40 mm grenade launchers and to meet NATO standards for range and operational flexibility. Military experts see this new system as marking the transition from pure surveillance or transport robots to tactically active UGV firepower platforms that can significantly reduce the risk to infantry by providing fire support without the direct presence of soldiers. Last robot standing: robots hold their ground. Ukraine is already successfully using UGVs to combine reconnaissance and firepower along the front lines, and earlier systems, such as a robot equipped with a .50-caliber machine gun, are said to have held their positions for several weeks. The operational experience gained from this is being incorporated into current systems, increasing tactical innovation on both sides of the conflict. Defense robotics in its own technology and industrial environment. Parallel to the procurement of individual platforms, there is a growing awareness in Europe that defense robotics is not just a US phenomenon, but must also be developed in its own technology and industrial environment in order to maintain strategic autonomy. HANNOVER MESSE, the world's most important platform for all technologies related to industrial transformation, is responding to this new awareness with the Defense Production Area, creating a new exhibition area for modern production technologies in the defense sector. There, companies will present concrete solutions for how the defense and security industry can scale its manufacturing capacities quickly, efficiently, and securely - embedded in the industrial environment and international reach of HANNOVER MESSE. For example, Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger will explain on the Center Stage at HANNOVER MESSE 2026 how shifts in the global security order are posing significant challenges for the defense industry. Technologies such as artificial intelligence, autonomous systems, drones, and hypersonic weapons are rapidly changing requirements. Papperger will use a panel discussion to show how Rheinmetall is responding to these technological and geopolitical changes in the face of international competition. Growing defensetech ecosystem. Current developments include Quantum Frontline Industries, a newly founded German-Ukrainian joint venture that is launching industrial production of tactical unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for the Ukrainian armed forces. The new UAVs are based on the proven "Zoom" and "Linza" drone designs. The production line is scheduled to start up in the first quarter of 2026 and will be set up in Germany - as a powerful response to the enormous demand for functional drones in the current war. Quantum Systems, based in Munich, is one of Europe's leading manufacturers of autonomous AI-supported eVTOL drones for inspection, reconnaissance, and tactical ISR tasks. The acronym eVTOL stands for electric Vertical Take-Off and Landing aircraft. The Munich-based defense tech company Helsing also develops AI-supported loitering munition drones such as the HX-2 and fortified ISR drones (HF-1), which are already in use in large numbers and are produced in Europe. In addition, Helsing is working on larger autonomous systems such as the UCAV CA-1 Europa with a long range and weapon carrying capacity, which is scheduled to make its maiden flight in 2027. Finally, Munich is represented for the third time in this list with ARX Robotics. The startup produces modular, autonomous UGVs with scalable hardware and software architectures for tactical tasks. According to the Munich-based company, platforms such as Hector or systems that connect existing vehicle fleets via software (with Mithra OS) are currently being evaluated or procured by several European armed forces. Startups such as ARX are thus part of a growing defense tech ecosystem that integrates AI functions, autonomous navigation, and adaptive deployment roles - as part of a structured defense dual-use cluster in Bavaria and beyond. Many players are working toward long-term strategic independence for Europe. In addition to German players, other European manufacturers such as Granta Autonomy from Lithuania are also active, for example with the Hornet and X-Wing loitering solutions, which are designed to conduct autonomous reconnaissance and monitor target areas more persistently as relevant support for NATO operations and local defense tasks. Another important European UGV developer is Milrem Robotics from Estonia. Products from the Estonians, such as THeMIS, are coming into focus for European armed forces, and industrial lessons learned from their use in Ukraine are being directly incorporated into further developments. In addition to classic drones and UGVs, European manufacturers are also advancing unmanned maritime systems: The Ukrainian MAGURA series, for example, shows how autonomous surface and lake navigation boats can be used for patrols, mine clearance, or so-called inclusive air defense. Larger collaborations such as the Eurodrone MALE RPAS (Airbus/Dassault/Leonardo) are also being pursued as part of Europe's long-term strategic independence. Maiden flights are planned for the second half of the decade. Defense robotics as part of a European defense strategy. The increased development and procurement of defense robotics systems is part of a European defense strategy that combines rising military spending and integrated funding programs - such as the European Defense Fund - to bring AI, robotics, and autonomous systems from research to application more quickly. Germany, for example, is promoting drone production through the Federal Ministry of Defense and recently allocated a budget for loitering munitions - colloquially known as kamikaze drones - to increase the Bundeswehr's striking power and tactical flexibility. Experts from the procurement office are currently testing the new systems. According to media reports, solutions from the Berlin-based defense startup Stark Defence with its Virtus drone, from Rheinmetall with its Raider model, and from the Munich-based company Helsing, which specializes in AI for the military, with its HX-2 drone are on the shortlist. Systems must be integrated ethically, normatively, and in terms of security policy. With Ukraine's approval of the Droid NW 40 mentioned at the beginning of this article, a trend is gaining momentum that more and more European players are picking up on: robotics and drones are no longer seen merely as auxiliary systems, but as central components of tactical, networked defense architectures. German companies and startups such as Quantum Systems, ARX Robotics, and Helsing are playing a central role in this, while transnational cooperation and industrialized drone production are Europe's response to the high demands of modern conflicts. At the same time, the challenge remains great to integrate these systems into existing defense frameworks in an ethically, normatively, and security-politically responsible manner. International industry gatherings such as HANNOVER MESSE are therefore important events, not only for advancing the networking of defense architectures, but also for strategically discussing the resulting social responsibility.

Medial
Dec 11th, 2025
Spotify CEO Daniel Ek leads €600M investment in AI defense tech firm Helsing

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek has led a €600 million investment round in Helsing, a German defence technology company, through his investment firm Prima Materia. Ek initially invested €100 million in Helsing in 2021. The investment focuses on drone warfare technology and AI-powered defence systems. Helsing's development has been accelerated by conflicts such as Russia's war with Ukraine, which has highlighted the increasing importance of artificial intelligence, mass deployment and autonomy in modern warfare. The funding represents a significant bet on the growing defence technology sector as military operations increasingly rely on AI-powered autonomous systems.

L'Usine Digitale
Oct 8th, 2025
Future war: Helsing strengthens maritime defense by acquiring Australian Blue Ocean.

Helsing, the German AI defense startup, announced on October 8th the acquisition of the Australian underwater glider manufacturer Blue Ocean.