BRINC announced this week that it has closed a $125 million financing round led by Motorola Solutions, with participation from Index Ventures and Figma CEO Dylan Field. The raise brings the public safety drone maker's total funding to “well over” a quarter billion dollars and is aimed at scaling deployment of its 911 response drones across the roughly 80,000 police and fire stations across the United States.

The company said the new capital will go toward expanding domestic manufacturing, bringing new products to market and scaling go-to-market operations. BRINC plans to move into a new facility by the end of the year that is three times the size of its current factory, a step the company says is needed to keep up with demand from public safety agencies.

"Every second matters in an emergency," said Blake Resnick, founder and CEO of BRINC, in a statement. "Our 911 response drones put eyes on scene before first responders arrive, giving everyone the situational awareness they need to act decisively and keep people safe."

BRINC said the round follows a period of rapid commercial growth. The company more than tripled revenue in 2025 and increased monthly production capacity fivefold. So far this year, BRINC has signed nearly four times as many 911 response drone contracts as it did over the same period in 2025, with customers including the Los Angeles Fire Department and the St. Louis Police Department, among hundreds of other agencies.

BRINC's product line spans indoor and outdoor missions. The company positions its Lemur 2 as “the most capable indoor drone,” its Responder as the leader in time on scene, and its Guardian as a 911 response drone built to replace helicopter response. BRINC also has exclusive integrations with Motorola Solutions and says its products interoperate with other public safety technology platforms.