14 Apr 2026
by Nancy Sampoorna’s

Building the UK’s quantum advantage: Turning strong foundations into global competitiveness

Quantum technologies are rapidly emerging as one of the most transformative innovation forces of the coming decades, with potential for breakthroughs across energy, telecoms, defence, and beyond. Quantum will sit at the heart of the next wave of both scientific and commercial progress. As the world marks World Quantum Day, the UK finds itself at a pivotal moment: equipped with strong foundations but needing the right environment to convert early leadership into lasting global competitiveness.  

Investment is strong but alone, not enough 

Over the past decade, the UK has built a world-class quantum ecosystem. Since the launch of the National Quantum Technologies Programme in 2014, the country has steadily deepened its research capabilities, industrial partnerships, and innovation investment and infrastructure. The recent announcement of up to £2 billion from the Technology Secretary to enable the UK’s ‘quantum leap’ underscores the scale of national ambition. But as demand accelerates globally, investment alone is no longer enough. The UK must also develop the skills, adoption pathways, collaboration models, infrastructure access and industrial incentives needed to translate research excellence into economic impact. 

The UK has strong technical foundations 

The UK’s quantum landscape has become increasingly diverse and dynamic. At a recent quantum sensing event hosted by Digital Catapult, experts emphasised that the market for quantum sensing alone could reach $7–10 billion by 2035, with the UK well-positioned to capture a significant share. Quantum inertial sensors, for example, represent a £100 million domestic opportunity in aviation. These technologies span, for example, magnetometry, gravimetry, quantum imaging, with many progressing through field trials, miniaturisation efforts, and real-world testing, signalling readiness for early  to compete on a global scale..  

The UK’s three quantum sensing hubs illustrate the breadth of this capability. QEPNT is advancing next generation quantum-enabled positioning, navigation, and timing systems; QuSIT is pioneering a plethora of technologies, including remote quantum-enabled gas sensing, underground mapping, and brain imaging; and QBIOMED is accelerating quantum-enhanced diagnostics and medical imaging. Collectively, they demonstrate the collaborative depth of the UK research base, and its ability to address real-world challenges.  

Technical excellence does not guarantee commercial success  

End users ultimately care about business benefits, not quantum novelty. Innovators must work closely with sectors such as healthcare, defence, transport, and energy to validate technologies in realistic environments and build trust in their reliability and performance. 

Workforce skills development is equally critical. While the UK boasts exceptional academic and technical expertise, gaps remain in industry-ready skills, systems engineering, and ensuring quantum literate professionals beyond the lab, across supply chains. Stronger academia-industry exchange, broader training pathways for non-technical teams, and earlier educational outreach into schools will be essential for building an agile quantum workforce capable of meeting future demand on a global scale. 

Government also recognises the urgency. As part of its frontier technologies strategy, DSIT is addressing how to catalyse commercial investment, mobilise procurement opportunities, and benchmark quantum technologies against classical alternatives, ensuring early buyers, from defence to infrastructure, have confidence in performance and value. 

Next steps 

As we celebrate World Quantum Day, one message is clear: the UK has the talent, research leadership, and innovation infrastructure to be a global quantum powerhouse. The next step is to bring together government, industry, academia, and the wider technology community to ensure these strengths translate into scalable companies, high value jobs and global market share. 

To help accelerate this journey, Digital Catapult has opened applications for the Quantum Technology Access Programme (QTAP) Cohort 3, delivered in collaboration with the National Quantum Computing Centre’s (NQCC) SparQ. This six‑month structured programme will support up to 12 participants, cultivating practical quantum capabilities and empowering industry end users to take confident, informed steps into the quantum era. 

If you’re ready to deepen your organisation’s quantum readiness, you can apply here. 

Author

Nancy Sampoorna

Nancy Sampoorna

Innovation Manager , Digital Catapult


World Quantum Day 2026: Insights from across the UK quantum sector

How does the UK turn its quantum strength into lasting global competitiveness? Hear directly from industry leaders, innovators, and researchers through videos, quotes, and expert perspectives.

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Authors

Nancy Sampoorna’s

Nancy Sampoorna’s

Innovation manager, Digital Catapult