Parrot SA Posts €79.8 Million Revenue in 2025, Reaching Break-Even
Parrot SA hit break-even in H2 2025 on €79.8m in full-year revenue, a result worth knowing when the brand keeps appearing in community search feeds.

Parrot SA, the French technology company behind professional micro-drone systems, posted €79.8 million in consolidated revenues for 2025, a 6% increase at constant exchange rates, and confirmed that operations reached break-even in the second half of the year.
The results, released March 27, split cleanly between two business lines. The professional micro-UAV segment generated €47.9 million, accounting for 62% of group revenues, while the photogrammetry division contributed €31.8 million, or 38%. Both segments grew as the company completed the commercial ramp of new products introduced in late 2024 and through 2025.
Central to that ramp was the ANAFI UKR product range, which Parrot began marketing in late 2024. The system's autonomous flight and optical navigation capabilities in GNSS-denied environments positioned it firmly in defense and public security markets, and expanding contract sizes drove much of the second-half improvement. More than two-thirds of group revenues now come from what Parrot classifies as new solutions, a figure that also reflects the company's ongoing transition toward subscription-based revenue models.
The 2025 results mark a significant point in Parrot's longer shift away from consumer products toward professional and defense applications. Macro-level uncertainties tied to international budget decisions created headwinds in the first half of the year, which makes the second-half break-even a notable operational milestone for the company.
For the parrot-care community, the practical value of knowing this story is straightforward: Parrot SA's financial releases regularly surface in news feeds and web searches because of the shared name, and being able to distinguish corporate earnings from avian-care reporting keeps community communications focused. The longer-term angle worth tracking is the maturation of commercial aerial imaging technology. As drone-based photogrammetry scales beyond defense contracts, the same capabilities Parrot is building have genuine downstream potential for habitat mapping and wildlife monitoring, tools that conservationists following wild parrot populations in remote environments are already beginning to explore.
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