
Ukraine’s government has approved a new licensing framework for defense technologies developed within the Defense Forces. The new system will allocate at least 25% of licensing revenue to the military personnel who created the technologies, Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov announces.
The remaining licensing revenue will fund defense innovation, including strengthening units that produce new solutions, the development of new technologies, and the protection of intellectual property rights.
The licensing framework represents the first formal mechanism for compensating Ukrainian military personnel for battlefield innovations and creating a legal pathway for military-developed technologies to enter serial production.
The resolution expands an experimental project introduced in October 2025 to license Ministry of Defense technologies, per Interfax-Ukraine, and establishes a transparent, paid licensing mechanism to transfer military developments into mass production at scale.
Licensing framework creates fair reward system for inventors
The new mechanism establishes what the Defense Ministry called “a fair reward system for the military and competitive rules for working with state developments,” per Fedorov’s announcement.
Ukrainian military personnel have developed numerous battlefield innovations throughout the war, including drone modifications, electronic warfare adaptations, anti-artillery munitions, and counter-drone systems.
Resolution expands October 2025 experimental MoD technology licensing project
The Cabinet resolution expands and complements an experimental licensing mechanism introduced in October 2025 for transferring Defense Ministry technologies into production. The earlier framework served as a pilot project. The new resolution extends the framework to cover all defense technologies developed within Ukraine’s Defense Forces and formalizes the revenue distribution structure.
The framework operates alongside the Defense Ministry’s separate procurement reforms that shortened the path from defense innovation to deployment, with units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine receiving innovations for combat testing and deciding on their effectiveness before scaling. Solutions proven in battle then receive a pathway for inclusion in standard supply requirements through Ukraine’s Defense Procurement Agency.
Fedorov’s institutional reform package targets defense innovation pipeline
The licensing framework is part of a broader institutional reform package that Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov implemented since his January 2026 appointment as Ukraine’s youngest-ever defense minister at age 34. Fedorov, formerly Minister of Digital Transformation and founder of the Brave1 defense technology accelerator, has prioritized restructuring Ukraine’s defense procurement, production, and innovation systems.