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ARK Invest is betting on underdog drone delivery company Manna to beat out Alphabet and Zipline

Bobby Healy is at peace with his drone delivery enterprise being unsexy. “Think of us like a low-cost airline,” the Manna CEO told Fortune. That pitch just landed him $50 million.

Manna, the Irish drone delivery startup, closed a Series B this month backed by ARK Invest—Cathie Wood’s firm, known for early investments in OpenAI, Tesla, and SpaceX—along with the Ireland Strategic Investment Fund, Schooner Capital, Coca Cola HBC, and Molten Ventures. The capital will be put towards expanding Manna’s U.S. and European operations. Total funding now sits at $110 million. 

Manna, founded in 2018, operates throughout Ireland, as well as Finland and Texas, delivering anything from burritos to biomedical tests. The company has already completed more than 250,000 successful deliveries. It recently announced a new partnership with Uber, and has existing contracts with DoorDash, Deliveroo, and Just Eat. 

The problem Manna hopes to solve isn’t ritzy, but the math and market are.

Road-based delivery in the U.S. costs merchants around $10 per order in driver costs alone. Manna does it for cents in electricity. Its drones fly at around 50 to 60 mph in a straight line, deliver in under three minutes, and turn around in under 60 seconds—eight deliveries per aircraft per hour versus the industry average of 1.2.

Meanwhile, the global rapid delivery economy—same-day and on-demand—is projected to grow 21.3% year-over-year for the next decade, reaching $100 billion by 2034, according to Manna. And the last-mile (from hub to final destination) delivery market was worth an estimated $166.45 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $311.31 billion by 2031, growing at a CAGR of 9.62 percent.

Manna’s U.S. target is 92 million family homes that gig economy delivery has never served profitably. As Healy notes, there are more than a billion food delivery orders placed annually in the U.S., and not enough drivers to move them without bleeding money. “Drones don’t take jobs away,” Healy added. “You’re giving every small business in the suburbs a better logistics platform than Amazon has.” 

Recent regulatory unlock, according to Healy, is what’s making VCs move now. The FAA has historically required drone operators to keep their aircraft in direct eyesight at all times, making commercial delivery at scale essentially illegal without a one-off waiver for every single flight. In August 2025, the agency proposed Part 108, a new permanent ruleset that would allow drones to fly beyond what operators can see.  The deadline to finalize these rules is mid-2026. 

Manna already has plans for 40 to 50 new U.S. locations in the next 12 months, starting in Texas and Oklahoma.

The competitive field has also thinned to four players: Manna, Google’s Wing (750,000+ deliveries, expanding to 150 Walmart stores this year), Zipline ($600M raise, $7.6B valuation, 2 million deliveries globally, but burning more than $60 per order according to a confidential Q4 2025 memo seen by Fortune), and Amazon Prime Air (~16,000 deliveries). Healy notes Amazon only serves its own parcels, leaving Manna, Zipline, and Wing as the three companies competing for what he calls a $300–$400 billion U.S. opportunity. Manna, however, is the only company in the cohort currently turning a profit on every flight.

In the end, Healy says drone delivery is going to be free. “The only losers here are the people selling cars and e-bikes.”

See you tomorrow,

Lily Mae Lazarus
X:
@LilyMaeLazarus
Email: lily.lazarus@fortune.com
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

Term Sheet podcast… This week’s guest is Mackenzie Burnett, CEO and cofounder of Ambrook–a modern finance toolkit for farmers. Agriculture is the backbone of the U.S. economy, yet the average American farmer earns only 5 cents of every dollar spent on food. Meanwhile, there’s been an almost 50% spike in bankruptcies of U.S. farms, and margins are thinner than ever due to falling revenues and rising production costs. On the podcast, Burnett breaks down the high-stakes world of agricultural finance, and she and Allie Garfinkle discuss why many farms still rely on paper ledgers, the “unscalable” journey to find product-market fit in a skeptical industry, and how modern financial tools are a critical part of the strategy to save American family farms. Watch the episode here.

Joey Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter. Subscribe here.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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