Russell Vought, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for the second Trump administration speaks during a Senate Committee on the Budget hearing to examine the President's fiscal year 2027 budget proposal in Capitol Hill on Apr. 16, 2026 in Washington D.C. The government's proposed budget for fiscal 2027, which includes a 40 percent increase to defense spending and a 10 percent cut to non defense spending. Getty Images via AFP-Yonhap
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon on Tuesday unveiled more details of President Donald Trump's $1.5 trillion defense budget request for fiscal year 2027, by far the largest year-over-year increase in defense spending in the post-World War Two era.
In a new wrinkle, the Pentagon has created a category it is calling "presidential priorities," covering Golden Dome missile defense, drone dominance, artificial intelligence and data infrastructure, and the defense industrial base, Pentagon officials told reporters.
Last year, Trump asked Congress for a national defense budget of $892.6 billion then added $150 billion through a supplemental budget request, sending the total price tag over $1 trillion for the first time in history.
On shipbuilding, the budget includes over $65 billion to procure 18 warships and 16 support ships made by General Dynamics and Huntington Ingalls Industries as part of what the Pentagon is calling the "Golden Fleet" initiative, the largest shipbuilding request since 1962, the officials said.
The budget ramps up Lockheed Martin F-35 procurement to 85 aircraft per year and includes $102 billion for aircraft procurement and research and development, a 26 percent increase over the prior year, the officials said. Development of next-generation systems like the Boeing Co F-47 fighter jet is also a priority, while $6.1 billion is requested for Northrop Grumman's B-21 bomber.
On drones, senior officials described the request as the largest investment in drone warfare and counter-drone technology in U.S. history. The budget requests $53.6 billion for autonomous drone platforms and warzone logistics, along with $21 billion for munitions, counter-drone technologies and advanced systems.
The Defense Autonomous Warfare Group, which previously received roughly $225 million, would see its funding balloon to approximately $54 billion. Senior officials said the vast bulk of that money is aimed at applying technology that exists today, not long-range basic research, and confirmed the group has effectively absorbed the Pentagon's earlier Replicator drone initiative.
The budget proposes multi-year procurement contracts for more munitions programs, arguing longer contracts give both large defense firms and their small and medium-sized suppliers the stability needed to expand production.
The request includes a pay raise weighted toward junior enlisted troops, getting a 7 percent increase, 6 percent for their superiors and 5 percent for the top ranks. The budget also proposes expanding the force by 44,000 additional service members in fiscal 2027, following the addition of more than 20,000 in fiscal 2026.
Source: Korea Times News