Zipline Drone Delivery Surges 13X, Hires Ex-Tesla CFO

Zipline said on July 15, 2026 that the number of businesses offering delivery through its drones grew 13X in the US during the first half of the year, pushing its lifetime delivery count past 2.5 million. The company also named three new C-suite executives — from Tesla, Waymo and Uber — and confirmed new market launches in Austin and Cleveland.
Background
Zipline operates autonomous delivery drones that cruise to a destination and lower packages by cable rather than landing, a design built for dense US neighborhoods as much as the rural clinics where the company started in Rwanda in 2016. Its aircraft fly under FAA BVLOS (Beyond Visual Line of Sight) approval, letting routes run without a pilot keeping the drone in direct sight — the regulatory piece that makes routine, scheduled delivery commercially viable rather than a one-off demonstration.
The company has now flown more than 135 million commercial autonomous miles and delivered over 20 million items without a reported safety incident, according to figures the company published alongside the July 15 announcement. It says a delivery now completes somewhere in its network roughly every 20 seconds, with 70% of that flight volume happening inside the United States.
13X Growth and Three New Executives
The headline figure is the 13X jump in Zipline's US "marketplace" — the roster of restaurants, pharmacies, and retailers customers can order from — during the first half of 2026. Existing partners are expanding fast: Little Caesars is growing from 5 to 65 Zipline-served locations, and food hall operator Wonder is adding 50 Texas locations to the network alongside Chipotle and local businesses like Houston's Anothai Cuisine.
To manage that scale, Zipline hired three executives with backgrounds far outside drone delivery:
| Executive | New role | Previous role |
|---|---|---|
| Sendil Palani | Chief Financial Officer | VP of Finance, Tesla (17 years) |
| Kevin Vosen | Chief Legal Officer | Chief Legal Officer, Waymo (7 years) |
| Allen Penn | Head of Commercial | Led Uber Eats global ops and Uber's Asia expansion |
"Zipline has an incredibly talented team working toward an inspiring mission," Palani said in the announcement, calling it "a special opportunity to help save and improve lives globally, while reducing cost and energy use at scale." Vosen, who spent seven years as Waymo's top lawyer, said Zipline's "next chapter is about making its experience accessible to communities worldwide while continuing our track record of safe, trusted operations."
CEO Keller Rinaudo Cliffton told CNBC on July 14 that he expects Zipline's US business to grow 15X over the course of 2026, supported by a South San Francisco factory capable of producing 24,000 new drones a year.
Austin and Cleveland: The Next Markets
Cleveland is where Zipline is launching its first US healthcare home-delivery service, flying prescriptions directly to patients through a partnership with Cleveland Clinic — a program PickDrones covered in detail after its July 13 confirmation. Zipline's broader healthcare network already serves more than 5,000 hospitals and health facilities worldwide, a role explored further in our guide to drones in medicine.
Austin joins the roster in the coming months for food and retail orders, following the pattern Zipline used in Houston and other Texas markets: land a national anchor partner first, then backfill with local restaurants and pharmacies once the delivery corridor is proven.
What This Means for Drone Pilots and the Industry
For commercial drone operators, Zipline's growth is a signal that BVLOS delivery has moved from waiver-by-waiver pilots to a repeatable business model the FAA is comfortable scaling nationally — a precedent that makes it easier for competitors like Wing, Flytrex, and Amazon Prime Air to make the same regulatory case in new cities. The hiring of executives from Tesla, Waymo, and Uber also signals that Zipline is preparing for the operational and logistical complexity of a much larger US fleet, not just more routes.
For pilots and technicians, that scale means more jobs in drone manufacturing, fleet maintenance, and airspace operations concentrated around Zipline's US hubs — and a growing body of real-world BVLOS operating data that regulators elsewhere, including EASA and CASA, are watching as they draft their own delivery-drone rules.
FAQ
Sources: Zipline press release via GlobeNewswire | CNBC
More like this
Related Articles

Cleveland Clinic Launches First US Drone Rx Delivery
Cleveland Clinic will fly prescriptions to patients' homes via Zipline drones this summer, the first US health system to offer it…

Skydio Dock Tops 1,070 Deployments in Just One Year
Skydio's autonomous Dock system passed 1,070 installations and 4 million flights in one year, expanding across public safety, util…

Wing Drone Delivery Expands to 1M+ Homes in Houston
Wing and Walmart added 8 new drone delivery hubs in Houston, bringing the total to 13 and reaching over 1 million residents with u…