The Top Software Ruling the Aerospace and Defense Industry

The aerospace and defense industry runs on code today, not just metal and propulsion. From design floors in Toulouse to mission control rooms in Colorado Springs, software now decides how fast a fighter jet ships, how a satellite stays online, and other operations. A&D executives already use AI-enhanced design and engineering to ensure the safety of their nation. Boston Consulting Group projects AI expenditure in the sector to grow from $26.6 billion in 2024 to $44 billion by 2030. This blog will break down the core software categories powering the aerospace and defense industry in 2026.
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Design and Engineering Software
Computer-Aided Design (CAD) Tools
Engineers at Boeing, Airbus, and Lockheed Martin rely on CAD platforms like CATIA, Siemens NX, and SolidWorks to model airframes, avionics housings, and missile components down to the micrometer. These tools feed directly into the digital thread that follows a part from concept to retirement.
Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) Systems
PLM software such as PTC Windchill, Dassault ENOVIA, and Arena tracks every revision, bill of materials, and engineering change order. PLM keeps maintained data in sync, which matters when a single fastener change can ground an entire fleet.
Manufacturing and Operations Software
Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES)
MES platforms like DELMIA Apriso and Aegis FactoryLogix run the shop floor. They enforce work instructions, capture real-time quality data, and create the traceability records needed for audits.
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
Enterprise Resource Planning software such as SAP S/4HANA, Infor CloudSuite, and Epicor Kinetic anchor the financial and supply chain backbones. They handle ITAR compliance, project accounting, and earned value management across multi-tier supplier networks.
Mission-Critical and Defense-Specific Software
Command, Control, and Simulation Platforms
Software like Palantir Gotham, Anduril Lattice, and BAE Systems command suites fuse sensor data, model threats, and guide commanders in real time. These platforms underpin the U.S. Golden Dome architecture, a software-defined missile defense program announced in 2026.
Cybersecurity and Zero-Trust Tools
With tightened enforcement, defense contractors deploy zero-trust frameworks, secure code analysis tools like Perforce Klocwork, and AI-driven threat detection platforms across their networks to safeguard controlled unclassified information.
Conclusion
The aerospace and defense industry no longer separates hardware from software. PLM, ERP, MES, AI-driven simulation, and zero-trust cybersecurity now sit at the core of every program. Leaders who modernize their software portfolio early will capture the next decade of growth in the aerospace and defense industry.