Every organization evaluating a drone detection system faces the same fundamental architectural decision: deploy an integrated platform that unifies multiple sensor types under a single command-and-control interface, or assemble a collection of best-of-breed point solutions and stitch them together. The drone detection market is growing at nearly 29% annually toward $2.32 billion by 2029, and with $500 million in federal C-UAS grant funding now flowing to state and local agencies, this is not an abstract question. It is a procurement decision that will define detection capability for years.
We build an integrated multi-sensor C2 platform, so we have a perspective. But this analysis presents both sides of the decision honestly, because the worst outcome is deploying the wrong architecture for your mission. Both approaches have trade-offs, and the right choice depends on your operational complexity, staffing model, budget structure, and growth trajectory.
In a point solution architecture, the buyer selects the strongest available product in each sensor category - one vendor's radar, another's RF detection system, a third's EO/IR camera - and connects them through custom integration or a third-party middleware platform. This is how many early counter-UAS deployments were built, and it remains a viable approach for organizations with the engineering resources to manage it. For a map of the five vendor categories in this market, read: Counter-Drone Companies: What Each Vendor Type Actually Does.
For context on what each sensor type does and where it has limits, our guide to the five sensor modalities every buyer should understand provides the technical foundation.
Advantages of point solutions:
Risks and costs of point solutions:
Point solutions maximize component-level performance. But what if your mission requires operational simplicity above all else?
In an integrated platform architecture, a single vendor provides the detection sensors and the command-and-control layer as a unified system. The sensors are designed to feed a common C2 platform, and the data fusion happens natively within the architecture.
Advantages of integrated platforms:
Risks and costs of integrated platforms:
Both approaches have legitimate use cases. The question is which factors should drive the decision for your specific deployment.
The direction of federal counter-UAS procurement provides a strong signal. When JIATF-401 selected Anduril's Lattice as the tactical C2 backbone for counter-drone operations under an $87 million initial task order within a $20 billion contract, the rationale was explicitly about integration. Lattice was selected to unify "a broad range of sensors and effectors from legacy systems to newly fielded capabilities" into a single C2 layer. The military chose a platform, not a collection of point solutions.
The pattern extends across civilian programs. The TSA's C-UAS Test Bed Program at Miami International Airport and LAX evaluates integrated multi-modal detection systems in live airport environments. The DHS Science and Technology Directorate assesses solutions that combine detection, tracking, and identification in a unified package. FEMA's C-UAS Grant Program funds multi-modal equipment packages, not individual sensor purchases. The procurement pattern consistently favors integrated capability.
For a complete analysis of the federal funding landscape and what it means for procurement decisions, read: The Anti-Drone Market in 2026: Where $1.8 Billion in Federal Funding Is Going.
Federal procurement trends favor integration. But every site is different. Here is a framework for making the decision.
| Evaluation Dimension | Integrated Platform | Point Solutions |
|---|---|---|
| Deployment Speed | Weeks - pre-integrated, pre-tested | Months - custom integration required |
| Sensor Fusion Quality | Native - sensors designed to share data | Middleware-dependent - approximated, not native |
| Total Cost of Ownership | Predictable - single vendor contract | Often exceeds projections - integration + multi-vendor support |
| Vendor Lock-In Risk | Higher - switching costs increase over time | Lower - individual components can be swapped |
| Component Flexibility | Limited to vendor's product line (unless open API) | Maximum - best-of-breed per modality |
| Operator Training | One interface, one workflow | Multiple interfaces, higher cognitive load |
| Accountability | Single vendor owns system performance | Shared across vendors - blame attribution is difficult |
| Scalability | Add sites within same platform natively | Each site may require re-integration work |
Choose point solutions when:
Choose an integrated drone detection system when:
For most SLTT agencies, event security operations, and critical infrastructure sites deploying counter-UAS capability for the first time under SAFER SKIES, the integrated platform approach offers the fastest path to operational readiness with the lowest risk. For a detailed breakdown of what the SAFER SKIES Act means for SLTT agencies, read: The SAFER SKIES Act Explained: What Counter-Drone Authority Means for Law Enforcement and Corrections. For organizations with deep engineering teams and specialized sensor requirements, point solutions remain a legitimate architecture - but the integration cost must be budgeted honestly.
Regardless of which architecture you choose, these questions apply to every vendor conversation:
For the complete vendor evaluation methodology, read our companion guide: Drone Detection Companies: The 4-Question Framework That Separates Real Solutions from Sales Pitches.
The choice between an integrated drone detection system and a point-solution assembly is not a feature comparison. It is an organizational decision about how much engineering complexity you are willing to own, how fast you need to be operational, and what level of vendor accountability you require. Federal procurement trends, the SAFER SKIES implementation timeline, and the operational realities of deploying counter-UAS at scale all point toward integrated platforms as the dominant architecture for the next procurement cycle. But the right answer is always the one that matches your mission.
See how an integrated drone detection system works in practice. Book a live AirGuard walkthrough with our team.