RENK America reports over $50 million in support and spares contracts awarded in late 2025 and early 2026

By Lukasz Prus (Defence Industry Europe)

RENK America has secured more than $50 million in support and spares contracts spanning late 2025 and the opening weeks of 2026. The company said the awards reflect continued demand for its drivetrain systems and lifecycle support services for U.S. and allied defense forces.
Photo: U.S. Army.

RENK America has secured more than $50 million in support and spares contracts spanning late 2025 and the opening weeks of 2026. The company said the awards reflect continued demand for its drivetrain systems and lifecycle support services for U.S. and allied defense forces.

 

Included in the total is a $25 million order awarded in December 2025 to support accelerated sustainment and modernization of critical platforms overseas. The effort is intended to maintain operational readiness and extend the service life of allied vehicle fleets operating in dynamic mission environments.

Additional contracts booked in early 2026 include $18 million for AVDS tank engine spares. A further combined $9 million covers HMPT Field Service Support and international spare parts for multiple global customers.

RENK America said these contracts highlight its role in sustaining operational readiness and ensuring key vehicle platforms remain mission capable. Production and support operations at the company’s Muskegon, Michigan facility are continuing at full capacity to meet customer delivery timelines.



“Our field service representatives are highly regarded for the help, training and advice that they provide: often finding proactive local fixes that keep vehicle powerpacks running and fleet uptime high,” said Corey Johnson, Transmission Line General Manager at RENK America.

The company’s lifecycle sustainment model integrates OEM engineering expertise, field service support, and access to technical data and spare parts. RENK America said this approach enables comprehensive support from depot-level maintenance to field operations.

“The Right to Repair is a hot topic for the US Army and defense officials, keeping spares and know-how available and close to the point of need,” said Ian Pain, CEO of RENK America. “For over fifty years, our Muskegon site has provided technical data, OEM quality spares and depot support to our customers. Of course, we are always looking to see what more we can do to leverage our hot production and repair lines to provide even more support to the warfighter”.

 

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