@itsolelehmann: This is how your next Chipotle burrito, online package, and medical prescription will be delivered. And it might be my …
Summary
Zipline has completed over 2 million autonomous drone deliveries, far surpassing competitors, by starting with emergency blood delivery in Rwanda. The company is now expanding rapidly in the US and Africa, with partnerships including Walmart and Chipotle, and a new quiet drone system.
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Cached at: 05/23/26, 03:58 AM
This is how your next Chipotle burrito, online package, and medical prescription will be delivered.
And it might be my favorite company in all of robotics right now.
Zipline has done over 2 million autonomous drone deliveries to date.
That’s more than every other drone delivery company on Earth combined.
For reference, Alphabet’s Wing has done about 500,000.
So obviously the first question is: how did a 10-year-old company outscale Google at autonomous drone delivery?
The answer is one of the smartest strategic bets I’ve seen in tech.
Most drone delivery companies started by trying to drop pizzas in American suburbs.
Because low stakes, easy customers, friendly weather, etc.
Zipline went the opposite direction.
They started in rural Rwanda, flying emergency blood to remote clinics where deliveries by truck could otherwise take 3+ hours.
It looked like a terrible idea in 2016.
But it turned out to be the smartest decision any drone company has ever made.
Because if you can build a system reliable enough to deliver blood to a dying patient in a monsoon in a 3rd world country…
Then delivering a Chipotle order to a suburban backyard becomes trivial.
The hardest use case became the moat.
Every single one of those flights made their system smarter, faster, and more reliable.
That compounded. Hard.
The result, 10 years in, is a lead that’s basically structural:
2 million deliveries done 5,000 hospitals served across multiple countries
The first million deliveries took them 7 years.
The second million took less than 2.
US deliveries growing 15% week-over-week for 7 straight months.
Now they’re coming for everything.
And the tech they’ve built to pull it off is genuinely science fiction.
Their newest drone, called the “Zip,” hovers a few hundred feet up while a smaller “Droid” gets lowered on a tether.
The Droid uses tiny thrusters to position itself precisely over a target zone the size of a picnic table.
It drops the cargo, then gets winched back up into the Zip.
And the whole thing is so quiet that customers couldn’t tell when their order had arrived.
So Zipline literally had to add an audible beep on approach.
The Zip then flies to one of Zipline’s autonomous charging stations, which look like streetlamps with an arm and a disc.
As Zipline rolls these out across cities, the coverage compounds automatically.
And the system uses 97% less energy than a gas-powered delivery truck.
Which makes obvious sense when you think about it. A delivery truck weighs 3,000 pounds. The average package weighs under 5.
And the scale of what they’re building toward is much bigger than just food delivery.
In November 2025, the US State Department signed a $150 million contract with Zipline to expand drone delivery across Africa.
It’s the first pay-for-performance contract the State Department has ever signed, anywhere.
At full scale, the deal will triple the hospitals Zipline serves and give 130 million people instant access to blood and essential medicine.
In the US, partnerships are stacking up fast:
Walmart, Chipotle, sweetgreen, Panera, Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic.
They’re already in Dallas and Arkansas, expanding to Houston and Phoenix this year, with at least 4 more states by year end.
And a June 2025 Executive Order on drones gave them operating rights across all 50 states.
The regulatory groundwork for nationwide deployment is basically done.
Their ultimate vision:
Every package under 8 pounds (food, medicine, household items) delivered by silent autonomous drones in 3 minutes instead of 3 days.
A network of streetlamp-sized charging stations across every city, with drones flying between them based on real-time demand.
In rural areas, every remote clinic gets the same access to medicine as a hospital in a capital city.
In American suburbs, your Chipotle order arrives from the sky in 3 minutes.
In Zipline founder @Keller’s own words:
“It’s very obvious that whoever succeeds will be one of the largest companies on Earth. Bigger than UPS and FedEx combined.”
And the insane part is that this isn’t a 5 or 10-year prediction.
It’s already happening at scale, in cities you can actually visit, today.
This is the infrastructure of the future being built right now, by a company most people in tech still couldn’t tell you the name of.
Oh yeah, and they just closed an $800M Series H at a $7.6B valuation.
Gud tech.
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