Brunei’s DSP/DaaS Market in 2026: Overview and Outlook

Three Core Clusters

With just over half a decade of sustained Drone Service Provider (DSP) or Drone-as-a-Service (DaaS) growth in Brunei Darussalam, preliminary research suggests three core clusters have developed. Typically, these have followed a combination of market valuation, proven use-cases, and accessibility of technology:

  1. Industrial

    • Focused on inspection, surveillance, and operational support.

    • This is the highest-value cluster by contract size, driven by the scale and safety requirements of energy sector clients.

    • Providers here emphasise workflow integration and operational reliability. Notably, many providers still depend on foreign partners or principals for advanced capabilities, particularly for access to high-value hardware.

  2. Geospatial

    • Specialised in photogrammetry, orthomosaics, and LiDAR outputs for infrastructure, construction, and land management clients.

    • The primary value driver here is technical complexity, contrasting with the operational complexity typical of industrial applications.

    • The natural client base, consisting of government agencies and infrastructure contractors, aligns directly with Brunei's public investment pipeline.

  3. Visual

    • The most accessible entry point into the market, with lower capital requirements and a broader potential client base.

    • Competition is driven by price and creative output rather than technical depth.

    • Barrier to entry continues to fall as consumer-grade platforms improve, which sustains both the volume of new entrants and the downward pressure on margins.

Why These Clusters Formed

The clustering pattern is not accidental. It reflects the pattern of Brunei's economic development and the global trajectory of drone adoption, where the clearest early returns have consistently come from cost-effective substitution of existing methods in high-value industries.

  1. The industrial cluster's concentration around oil and gas is a direct consequence of sector dominance. Where the revenue is large and the operational risk is high, the business case for drone-based inspection and monitoring is straightforward. Clients in this sector have procurement infrastructure capable of absorbing new service lines, and the safety case, namely, reduced personnel and exposure in hazardous environments, provides a non-cost argument that accelerates adoption. This is particularly relevant as government policy shifts toward greater cost-saving measures.

  2. Geospatial services grew alongside Brunei's sustained infrastructure and land management activity. Drones offer measurable efficiency gains over traditional survey methods in terms of speed, coverage, and data density; critical advantages in a sector where project timelines and cost control are constant pressures. The technical barrier is real but achievable, for example, by adapting Geospatial Analysts to more aerial-oriented work. This adoption is also spearheaded by commercially accessible multi-copter geospatial technologies; for context, aerial LiDAR deployment costs have dropped down to a fraction of what they were in the previous decade.

  3. The visual cluster's formation reflects the technology itself. As drone platforms became cheaper, more capable, and easier to fly, creative and media applications became viable for a broader range of operators. Arguably, the cluster exists because the barrier to entry fell, not because a specific demand signal emerged, which is precisely why it remains the most price-competitive segment.

Near-Term Outlook

Four trends are likely to shape how these clusters evolve over the next two to four years:

  1. New Sector Expansion: Government as Primary Driver

    As oil and gas revenues transition, the most accessible source of high-value UAS contracts will shift from energy-based GLCs toward government-led initiatives. These include environmental monitoring, national mapping programmes, and infrastructure inspections tied to public investment cycles such as the 12th National Development Plan (RKN12). Providers currently anchored in the industrial cluster will need to build relationships and capability suited to public sector procurement, a different sales motion and compliance environment from energy sector contracting.

  2. Depth-over-Breadth

    As more operators enter the market, whether drone-led businesses or companies adopting UAS as a supporting capability, the generalist position becomes harder to sustain commercially. Markets at this stage of maturity typically reward specialisation: providers who can demonstrate deeper technical competence, tighter integration with client workflows, and more defensible differentiation.

  3. In-House Adoption

    This is the trend with the most significant long-term implications. As UAS technology matures and its ROI becomes more demonstrable across sectors, from security to construction to facilities management, more organisations will look to bring drone capability in-house rather than contracting it out. This does not eliminate the market for external providers; it changes its shape. Companies that established an early market position as pure drone operators will face pressure to reposition, such as toward supporting roles such as training, consultation, or procurement.

  4. Continued Cost-Pressure on the Visual Segment

    The dynamics that created the visual cluster (e.g., falling hardware costs, accessible platforms, low technical barriers) continue to intensify. New entrants will keep arriving, margins will keep compressing, and differentiation will increasingly depend on either scale (volume production, established client relationships) or niche positioning (specific creative styles, proprietary show formats, vertical specialisation). Providers in this cluster who have not built one of those two things face the most exposed position in the near term.

Brunei's drone services market is past its formation stage and entering a period of competitive sorting. The clusters that formed around clear demand signals (e.g., industrial, geospatial, visual) will not disappear, but the economics within each are shifting.

The providers most likely to sustain and grow are those who recognise that the early-market advantage of simply offering drone services is eroding, and that the next competitive layer is built on deeper technical capability, stronger client relationships, and the willingness to evolve.

About Us

Angkasa is a Brunei Darussalam-based Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) business, helping organisations with drones via research, documentation and advisory work. We do not sell drone ops or hardware, allowing us to provide objective, unbiased work to our clients and ensure they are able to grow in a way that’s best for their unique contexts.

To learn more, contact UAS Advisor, Alawi, at alawi@angkasaadvisory.com or (673) 8999 772.

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AI Policy: All content is authored and developed entirely by in-house. Artificial intelligence is strictly utilised for supporting tasks such as structuring, grammar refinement, and proofreading to ensure originality, quality and relevance.

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