Aerospace Component Machining
CNC machining shops producing precision aerospace components.
Market snapshot
These figures describe Defense & Aerospace Manufacturing (5.8.4), the segment that Aerospace Component Machining sits within — not Aerospace Component Machining on its own.
Profiled and sized under the dedicated Aerospace & Defense sector (NAICS 3364 and related); not separately sized here to avoid double-counting.
Business model & economics
Revenue model
Defense programs and commercial-aerospace production
Key economics
- Recurring revenue
- Moderate–High
- EBITDA margin
- Program- and aftermarket-driven
- Capex intensity
- High
long programs and aftermarket
Characteristics
- Anchored by primes and a deep supplier base.
- Program-driven, technology-intensive.
- Fully profiled under Aerospace & Defense.
Geographic concentration
Defense and aerospace manufacturing clusters around the major program sites — Kansas, Connecticut, Washington, and Arizona — spanning airframes, engines, and avionics.
U.S. Census Bureau — 2022 County Business Patterns (establishments by state), NAICS 3364. Concentration shown by location quotient.
M&A deal context
Who’s acquiring
- Aerospace & defense primes
- Tier-1 supplier consolidators
- PE-backed defense platforms
What’s driving deals
- Defense-budget and program demand.
- Supply-chain consolidation.
- See the Aerospace & Defense sector.
Find Aerospace Component Machining acquisition targets
Search Acquisera’s index for companies classified under Aerospace Component Machining (5.8.4.1) and build a targeted deal pipeline.
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