The FAA Type-Certified operator becomes the first publicly reporting pure-play drone delivery company as it scales healthcare, retail, and restaurant operations.
MatternetĀ has raised approximately $33 million in an oversubscribed private placement and completed a go-public reverse merger with Los Altos Ventures Corp., now renamed Matternet, Inc. The Mountain View company is the only operator holding FAA Type Certification for a drone delivery platform.
The financing was led by Ed Eisler of EE Holdings and Mark Tompkins of Montrose Capital Partners, with several existing investors also participating. The Benchmark Company and Seaport Global Securities served as lead placement agents. Montrose Capital Partners sponsored the go-public transaction.
Matternet Drone Delivery Targets Next-Generation Platform
Proceeds will fund the next-generation Matternet drone delivery platform and expand commercial operations across food, retail, and healthcare. The company already builds the Matternet M2 aircraft, the Matternet Station, and the Matternet Software Platform.
āAs we enter the era of physical AI, we believe 2026 is the inflection point for drone delivery in the United States,ā said Andreas Raptopoulos, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Matternet. āWith recent regulatory advances and growing enterprise adoption, we believe the category is entering a phase of exponential growth. With this financing, we are accelerating the development and deployment of our next-generation drone delivery platform to power instant, autonomous delivery for restaurant, retail, and healthcare leaders.ā
Commercial Momentum Across Healthcare and Retail
Matternet partners with UPS for healthcare logistics and Daveās Hot Chicken in the restaurant category. Recent weeks brought a strategic partnership with SoftBank Robotics America, the launch of NHS drone delivery operations in Central London, and the appointment of Sanjay Kotte to the board.
āDrone delivery is a magical way to move things from A to B,ā Raptopoulos said. āInstead of sending a two-ton car across town to deliver a meal or retail item, a small, electric, autonomous aircraft can move it through the air faster, more efficiently, and at lower cost.ā
The company has logged more than 60,000 commercial flights across U.S. and European cities since 2014. UPS and Ameriflight both hold FAA Part 135 authorization to operate the Matternet M2.
More information is available atĀ Matternet.
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Ian McNabb is a journalist focusing on drone technology and lifestyle content at Dronelife. He is based between Boston and NH and, when not writing, enjoys hiking and Boston area sports.

