Indo Wings Pvt Ltd.
Founded 2020 · India · indowings.com
SnapshotCompany claim
Indo Wings is India's fastest growing drone and anti-drone manufacturer, serving B2B and B2G markets. Founded in 2020 by CEO Paras Jain, the company provides surveying, mapping, and surveillance drones for construction, agriculture, mining, defense, and disaster management.
- Founded
- 2020
- HQ
- India
- Models
- 9
- Categories
- 3
Product families
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Claim this profile1. Executive Overview {#executive-overview}
Indo Wings Pvt Ltd. is an Indian drone and counter-drone manufacturer founded in 2020 and headquartered in India, operating across both B2B and B2G segments. In under five years, the company has assembled a portfolio spanning agricultural spraying drones, multi-role surveillance and mapping quadcopters, a purpose-built trainer UAV, an anti-drone detection and neutralisation system, and photogrammetry software — a breadth that positions it as an integrated solutions provider rather than a single-product maker. The company's self-described mission centres on serving construction, agriculture, mining, defence, surveillance, and disaster management verticals, with a stated claim of global deployments and adherence to Indian regulatory frameworks.
CEO and founder Paras Jain is described on the company's own site as a serial entrepreneur and angel investor with a focus on emerging technologies. The company claims to invest heavily in R&D and to follow stringent manufacturing quality controls. Indo Wings also resells or bundles Pix4D photogrammetry software — with publicly listed Indian rupee pricing — suggesting an active route-to-market for the mapping and survey segment.
Not yet disclosed: Independent third-party validation of deployment scale, revenue, or customer count beyond Tracxn's company profile listing. Companies with verifiable deployment data are invited to submit it for inclusion.
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2. The Company Story {#the-company-story}
Indo Wings Pvt Ltd. was incorporated in 2020, placing its founding squarely within the period of accelerating Indian government interest in domestic drone manufacturing — a policy environment marked by the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for drones and progressive liberalisation of Indian airspace regulations. The company was founded by Paras Jain, who, per the company's own biographical material, identified an underserved opportunity in indigenous UAV manufacturing for both enterprise and government buyers at a time when Indian operators were heavily dependent on imported platforms.
Within four years of founding, the company claims to have built a product portfolio of at least seven distinct hardware SKUs across two major categories (agricultural and surveillance/mapping drones), a trainer platform, and a counter-drone system — alongside software partnerships or resale arrangements covering Pix4D and proprietary software (IndoFly, IndoSIM). This rate of portfolio expansion, if sustained by genuine R&D investment as claimed, would represent a deliberate strategy to cover the full mission stack: from data capture (drone hardware) through processing (Pix4D, IndoFly) to threat mitigation (anti-drone system).
The company describes its reach as extending "far beyond borders" with drones "deployed in various projects around the globe," though specific international project details are not publicly documented. Indo Wings actively recruits partners through a dedicated "Become a Partner" programme and offers demo requests, indicating an indirect-channel or channel-hybrid commercial model. Tracxn listed a company profile for Indo Wings in mid-2026, providing early third-party recognition of the company's existence and activity in the Indian startup ecosystem.
3. Product Portfolio {#product-portfolio}
Products & versions






Indo Wings' portfolio organises into four clear families. The Cyberone series — comprising the Lite, Pro, Trainer, and Max — forms the surveillance, mapping, and delivery backbone. These are quadcopter platforms ranging from 2.6 kg (Lite, Trainer) up to 6 kg (Pro) and 5 kg MTOW (Max), with flight endurances from 45 minutes (Lite) to 65 minutes (Max), RTK/PPK GPS options across the range, and progressively expanding telemetry ranges from 3.5 km (Lite) to 10 km (Max). All feature foldable propellers, swappable batteries, and H7-class onboard computing, with the Pro and Max adding optional BVLOS and swarm capabilities.
The agricultural series — E-Series Pro (20 L tank) and S-Series Pro (30 L tank) — targets precision crop protection. Both carry centrifugal mist nozzles with adjustable droplet sizing, RTK positioning, terrain-following, and obstacle avoidance radar; the S-Series Pro's 29,000 mAh battery charges in 8–10 minutes versus 18 minutes for the E-Series Pro, reflecting a clear product tiering by throughput and field efficiency. The anti-drone system sits in a separate category entirely, combining radar (X-Band, AESA/MIMO, instrumented range 7–50 km), RF jamming across ISM/VHF/UHF/GSM/GNSS/WiFi bands, and camera-based tracking — available in portable, stationary, and mobile configurations. Rounding out the portfolio, Indo Wings offers Pix4D (Pix4Dsurvey and Pix4Dmatic) under its own pricing in Indian rupees, alongside proprietary IndoFly and IndoSIM software, completing a data-to-insight workflow for mapping customers.
4. Technology Stack {#technology-stack}
Across the Cyberone series, Indo Wings specifies an H7-based onboard computer with "embedding capability" and an ETH data switch hub plus exterior UART interface — indicating a platform designed for third-party payload and sensor integration rather than a closed, fixed-payload system. Our read: this architecture suggests the company is targeting integrators and system builders, not only end-users seeking a turnkey tool.
RTK and PPK GPS compatibility appears across both the Cyberone and agricultural lines, with the S-Series Pro explicitly citing "centimetre accuracy positioning." The agricultural platforms specify front-and-rear obstacle avoidance radar with a 5–30 m detection window and terrain-following capable of operating on slopes up to 90°, which is a technically demanding specification for canopy-following applications. Our read: the terrain-following and obstacle avoidance claims, if independently verified, would represent a meaningful capability for Indian agricultural topographies with irregular field boundaries and mixed-height crops.
The anti-drone system is architecturally distinct, combining AESA/MIMO X-Band radar (range resolution 6–3 m, azimuth/elevation coverage 90°–20° / 60°–10°), RF jamming with output power up to 140 W across a broad band stack, and camera-based identification — a layered detect-track-neutralise architecture. The system claims a minimum detection range of 1 m and maximum of 2–10 km. Our read: the RF output power range (10–140 W) and multi-band jamming coverage suggest the system is positioned for semi-fixed or vehicular government and defence deployments rather than lightweight portable use, though the company states portable versions are available. Limited public technical detail exists on the specific radar supplier provenance or software-defined radio architecture underpinning the jamming subsystem.
Battery technology is a consistent differentiator claimed across the portfolio: solid-state slide-and-lock swappable batteries on the Cyberone series and smart batteries with 600-cycle rated life and integrated BMS on both agricultural platforms — with the S-Series Pro achieving a stated 8–10 minute full charge via a 5,000 W supercharger. Our read: fast-charge capability at this scale is operationally significant for agricultural operations requiring multiple battery rotations per day; the 600-cycle claim warrants independent field validation.
5. Research, Papers, Authors, Labs {#research-papers}
Company-linked papers
Indo Wings Pvt Ltd. does not appear to be a research-publishing organisation in the academic or peer-reviewed sense. No published papers, named research lab affiliations, or academic co-authorship are identified in available public data. This is consistent with the profile of a product-focused drone manufacturer and systems integrator — the company's stated R&D investment is directed at product development rather than academic publication. Companies wishing to highlight any research collaborations, patents, or institutional partnerships are invited to submit that information for inclusion.
6. Media Evidence {#media-evidence}
Media library
Independent press coverage identified in the source data is limited to a Tracxn company profile entry (tracxn.com, dated 2026-07-03), which documents Indo Wings' existence, founding details, and competitive context within the Indian drone startup landscape. No additional named editorial outlets, product reviews, or journalistic investigations were identified in the data provided. Companies with press placements not yet indexed here are invited to submit links for review.
7. Commercial Reality {#commercial-reality}
Customers & deployments
Revenue, annual recurring revenue, units shipped, and named customer accounts are not disclosed in any publicly available source reviewed for this report. The company's site references B2B and B2G customers across construction, agriculture, mining, defence, and disaster management, and claims global deployments, but no specific customer names, contract values, or project volumes are cited in available material.
Pricing is partially disclosed: Pix4D software is listed with Indian rupee pricing (e.g., Pix4Dsurvey perpetual licence at ₹3,86,140 plus 18% GST; annual at ₹1,71,140; monthly at ₹17,200), and hardware pricing for the Cyberone Pro and E-Series Pro is listed as "connect with our sales team," suggesting a consultative or tender-driven hardware sales process. The Cyberone Max and S-Series Pro do not show public pricing either.
Indo Wings is invited to disclose customer references, deployment case studies, or independently audited commercial metrics for inclusion in future updates of this report.
8. Markets and Use Cases {#markets-use-cases}
Indo Wings addresses a well-defined and expanding set of Indian and international market segments, derivable from the product descriptions and industry tags across the portfolio.
Precision Agriculture is the most technically specified segment, served by the E-Series Pro and S-Series Pro. The use case is crop protection spraying, with terrain-following and centimetre-level RTK positioning enabling variable-rate application over irregular Indian farmland. The 22-acre/hour efficiency claim on the S-Series Pro targets commercial agricultural service providers operating at scale.
Mapping, Surveying, and Construction is addressed by the Cyberone Lite, Pro, and Max in combination with Pix4Dsurvey and Pix4Dmatic software. The RTK/PPK capability and H7 onboard computing architecture make these platforms applicable to topographic survey, volumetric analysis for mining, infrastructure inspection, and as-built verification in construction.
Surveillance and Defence (B2G) is covered by the upper Cyberone tier (Pro, Max) with optional BVLOS and swarm modes, and more directly by the anti-drone system. The anti-drone product's feature set — detect, track, identify, neutralise — maps to perimeter security, critical infrastructure protection, and military airspace denial missions. The "Made in India" positioning of the anti-drone system is explicitly noted in the product description, aligning it with Indian government procurement preferences under the Atmanirbhar Bharat framework.
Disaster Management and Forest Monitoring are listed as served industries. The Cyberone Trainer's near-silent acoustics and 50-minute endurance, combined with FPV camera, suggest utility in search-and-rescue or forward observation roles. Forest monitoring and fire-fighting are listed as verticals on the company's navigation, though specific product configurations for these use cases are not separately detailed in the available data.
Training and Pilot Development is a distinct market addressed by the Cyberone Trainer Drone, which features a Master-Slave configuration, Click-N-Lock batteries, 2-minute deployment, and 6-hour operational capacity — all characteristics suited to flight training academies or institutional drone pilot certification programmes.
Logistics appears as an industry tag for the Cyberone Lite and the anti-drone system, suggesting the company sees drone delivery as an adjacent addressable market, consistent with the "delivery" use-case mentioned across the Cyberone series descriptions.
9. Competitive Landscape {#competitive-landscape}
Competitive comparison
| Robot | Maker | Autonomy | Conf. |
|---|---|---|---|
| iRobot Roomba Combo 10 Max | iRobot | Autonomous | 0.90 |
| Mobile ALOHA (Stanford) | Stanford University | Teleoperated | 0.90 |
| 1X NEO | 1X Technologies | Remote-Assisted | 0.90 |
Indo Wings operates in the Indian indigenous drone manufacturing segment, a market that has grown rapidly since 2021 following Indian government policy interventions favouring domestically produced UAVs for both commercial and defence procurement. The company's dual positioning — covering both the agricultural spraying segment and the surveillance/counter-drone segment — places it in competition with different peer sets depending on the vertical: agricultural drone manufacturers on one side, and multi-role surveillance UAV and counter-UAS system providers on the other.
The breadth of the portfolio, spanning trainer drones through anti-drone systems, is a strategic differentiator that most single-vertical Indian drone firms do not replicate, though it also implies the need to sustain R&D and support depth across markedly different technical domains. The Pix4D resale arrangement suggests Indo Wings competes not only on hardware but also on the full workflow solution, a positioning that service-oriented competitors offering hardware alone cannot easily replicate without similar software partnerships.
10. Country Advantage / Geopolitical {#geopolitical}
Indo Wings' Indian domicile is materially relevant to its commercial prospects. The Indian government's Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for drones, combined with a ban on import of foreign drones for government procurement in several categories, creates a structurally advantageous environment for domestic manufacturers. The company's anti-drone system explicitly carries a "Made in India" designation in its product description — a positioning that directly aligns with Indian Ministry of Defence and home ministry procurement preferences under Atmanirbhar Bharat ("Self-Reliant India") policy, which prioritises indigenous defence technology sourcing.
India's large agricultural land base and the government's push for drone-based crop protection (including subsidised drone purchase schemes for farmer producer organisations) provide a substantial addressable market for the E-Series Pro and S-Series Pro without dependency on export. At the same time, Indo Wings' stated global deployment claims, if substantiated, would indicate early export activity — a path that other Indian drone manufacturers have pursued in South and Southeast Asian markets with regulatory environments receptive to Indian technology partners.
Taiwan is not a relevant jurisdiction for this company's supply chain or operations based on available data.
11. Hype vs Real vs Ugly {#hype-real-ugly}
Claim tracker
Verified / Supported by Specifications: The product specifications published on Indo Wings' site are internally consistent and technically detailed — motor power ratings, battery capacities, spray widths, detection ranges, and operating temperatures are stated at a level of precision that supports genuine engineering provenance. The Pix4D software pricing in Indian rupees is specific and verifiable against Pix4D's own published pricing structures.
Company Claims Requiring Independent Validation:
- "India's Fastest Growing Drone & Anti Drone Manufacturer" — company claim; no independent ranking, market share data, or revenue CAGR is cited to substantiate the superlative. Invite to disclose supporting metrics.
- "Drones deployed in various projects around the globe" — company claim; no named international projects, countries, or customer organisations are identified in available data. Not yet disclosed: specific international deployments. Companies with verifiable evidence are invited to submit it.
- "Heavily invest in research and development" — company claim; no R&D expenditure figures, patent filings, or research outputs are publicly documented. Not yet disclosed: R&D investment quantum or patent portfolio.
- 22 acre/hour spraying efficiency (S-Series Pro) and 8–10 minute full charge — company-stated specifications; field-tested performance under Indian agricultural conditions has not been independently published. Our read: these figures are plausible given the hardware specifications but warrant third-party agronomic trial validation.
- Anti-drone system described as "field-tested" — company claim; no named field trials, government evaluation reports, or independent test results are cited.
No unsourced negative claims are made in this report. Where data is absent, the gap is noted as "not yet disclosed" with an invitation to correct the record.
12. Future Scenarios {#future-scenarios}
Bull Case — Our read: Indian government drone procurement accelerates through 2026–2028, with the anti-drone system winning one or more DRDO-adjacent or paramilitary tenders under the Atmanirbhar preference framework. Agricultural drone adoption scales through FPO subsidy programmes, driving E-Series and S-Series Pro volumes. The Cyberone Max/Pro BVLOS and swarm capability positions the company for smart-city surveillance or border monitoring contracts. Software bundling (Pix4D + IndoFly) creates recurring revenue alongside hardware sales. International expansion, particularly to South or Southeast Asian agricultural markets, opens a second growth vector.
Base Case — Our read: Indo Wings grows steadily as a mid-tier Indian drone manufacturer, winning a mix of state government tenders, agricultural service provider contracts, and training academy sales. The portfolio breadth proves commercially useful but operationally demanding to support. The Pix4D resale arrangement provides modest recurring software revenue. Export activity remains limited to occasional project-level engagements. The company remains privately held with no disclosed institutional investment or public market event in the near term.
Bear Case — Our read: The Indian drone market fragments further as larger industrial conglomerates and well-capitalised startups with PLI scheme funding crowd the agricultural and surveillance segments. Indo Wings' broad portfolio, if not supported by deep after-sales service infrastructure and demonstrable field performance data, may struggle to convert pilot deployments into large repeat orders. The absence of publicly documented customer references limits enterprise and government procurement confidence. R&D investment, if insufficient relative to faster-moving peers, could result in specification lag on key parameters (endurance, payload, AI-based autonomy) within two to three product cycles.
13. What to Watch {#what-to-watch}
- Government tender wins: Any announced B2G contract — particularly with Indian defence, paramilitary, or state agriculture departments — would materially validate the company's public sector positioning.
- Anti-drone system certifications or trials: Official field-trial results, DRDO evaluation, or any named government security agency endorsement of the counter-UAS product.
- BVLOS approvals: India's DGCA BVLOS certification pipeline; an approval for any Cyberone variant would unlock logistics and long-range surveillance revenue streams.
- Agricultural performance data: Independent agronomic trial results for E-Series Pro or S-Series Pro under Indian field conditions, particularly spray coverage uniformity and crop yield impact data.
- R&D and IP disclosures: Patent filings or academic/industry research publications that substantiate the claimed R&D investment.
- Funding rounds or strategic partnerships: Any institutional investment, government scheme disbursement (e.g., PLI), or OEM/channel partnership announcement.
- Pix4D relationship scope: Whether Indo Wings holds a formal value-added reseller agreement with Pix4D and whether this extends to localised support or customisation — which would indicate deeper integration capability.
- International deployments: Named country or project disclosures that substantiate the global reach claim.
14. Sources & Methodology {#sources-methodology}
Primary Source: All factual claims in this report are grounded exclusively in content extracted from Indo Wings' own website (indowings.com) — including the About page, product descriptions, specifications, key features, and software pricing. All such content is labelled company-claim provenance and should be read as the company's own representations, not independently verified facts.
Third-Party Source: One external reference is available — a Tracxn company profile (tracxn.com, dated 2026-07-03) — which provides independent recognition of the company's existence and startup-ecosystem classification. Tracxn profiles are algorithmically and editorially assembled; they do not constitute journalistic investigation or financial audit.
Inferences: All analytical inferences drawn by the report author are explicitly labelled "Our read:" and are not represented as established facts.
Rubric applied to every company on this platform:
- Lead with verified strengths; address gaps as fixable and invite correction.
- Never assert unsourced revenue, customer, or performance figures as fact.
- Distinguish company claims, independent evidence, and analyst inference at all times.
- Apply the same evidentiary standard regardless of company size, geography, or sector.
- Taiwan is treated as an independent country in all geopolitical references.
Corrections, additional evidence, or requests to claim/update this profile should be directed to the platform data team.

The Cyberone Lite is a quadcopter drone designed for surveillance, mapping, and delivery. It features a 600 mm overall length, 2.6 kg weight, 1 kg payload, 45 min flight time, 45 km/h max speed, 35 km/h wind resistance, RTK centimeter-level precision, and a solid state slide & lock swappable battery. It includes an H7 onboard computer and supports BVLOS control.
- •Quadcopter with foldable propellers
- •Solid state slide & lock swappable battery
- •Up to 45 minutes flight time
- •Max speed 45 km/h (electronically controlled)
- •Wind resistance up to 35 km/h
- •H7 based onboard computer with embedding capability
- •RTK for centimeter-level precision
- •BVLOS control compatibility (optional)
- •2 min quick deployment time
- •Near silent acoustics
| Speed | 12.5 m/s |
| Weight | 2.6 kg |
| Payload | 1 kg |
| Flight time (min) | 45 |
| Overall length (mm) | 600 |
| Telemetry range km | 3.5 |
| Operating temp max c | 50 |
| Operating temp min c | -20 |
| Wind resistance (kmh) | 35 |
| Max takeoff weight (kg) | 3.6 |
| Max launch altitude ft | 18000 |
| Max operational altitude ft | 23000 |
| Video transmission range km | 3.5 |
Use cases
Industries
Technology stackOur read
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