U.S. Army Tests $170K Drone Against Cheap FPV Rivals
Army adopts Switchblade 600 drone under LASSO program
July 10, 2025Clash Report

ClashReport
The U.S. Army is pressing forward with its Low Altitude Stalking and Strike Ordnance (LASSO) program, fielding the Switchblade 600 drone at a cost of $170,000 per unit. The system is designed to offer infantry units precision strike capability against armored targets. However, this comes as Ukraine and Russia deploy thousands of low-cost, first-person view (FPV) drones priced as low as $300 to $500.
According to recently released Pentagon budget documents, the Army will acquire 294 Switchblade 600 drones and 54 control units priced at $69,204 each. The contrast in pricing has sparked debate over whether the U.S. military is moving too slowly to embrace scalable drone warfare.
Ukraine’s FPVs Set New Standard In Asymmetric Warfare
Inspired by Ukraine’s battlefield success with cheap FPV drones, the U.S. Army initiated LASSO in 2023 as a rapid procurement effort. The Switchblade 600 includes thermal imaging, precision guidance, and tube launch capability—features largely absent in cheaper FPVs but resulting in significantly higher costs.
Meanwhile, Ukraine now produces over 200,000 FPVs per month. These have become a core part of the war effort, accounting for an estimated 60–70% of Russian casualties, according to a RUSI report. In contrast, U.S. production remains limited, with FPV units still under boutique-level procurement.
New Budget Hints At FPV Expansion
Despite the high cost of LASSO, the Army has also allocated funds to a parallel initiative for “Purpose Built Attritable Systems” (PBAS), featuring goggles, controllers, and expendable drones. Each PBAS kit, containing six drones, is priced at around $34,826, with individual drones estimated at $5,000.
Companies like Neros, which have already supplied thousands of FPVs to Ukraine, are now positioning themselves as scalable suppliers to the Pentagon. Neros’ CEO says the company aims to produce up to 10,000 drones monthly by early 2026.
In a further sign of strategic recalibration, the Army issued a new solicitation this week seeking thousands of FPV drones priced below $2,000 each.
Sources:
Related Topics
Related News
Russia Launches Over 100 Drones at Ukraine
Ukraine - Russia War
July 2025
Zelensky: Russia Is Targeting Civilians Along Front
Ukraine - Russia War
August 2025
Russia, Ukraine Trade Drone Strikes Causing Major Damage
Ukraine - Russia War
August 2025
UK Unveils 100 New Russia Sanctions
Europe
September 2025
Zelensky Says Putin ‘Hates Me’ — and the Feeling Is Mutual
Ukraine - Russia War
October 2025
Ukraine Becomes Global Hub for War Tech
Defense
July 2025