Specialty materials and industrial technologies

What is DuPont?

Specialty materials and industrial technologies company with $6.8B 2025 continuing net sales after Qnity spin, headquarters in Wilmington, DE, and public-market scale as DD.

Category
Specialty materials and industrial technologies
Headquarters
Wilmington, DE
Founded
1802
Employees
24,000
Total funding
Public company; DD
Status
DD; ~$20B market cap

What is DuPont?

DuPont is a specialty materials and industrial technologies business headquartered in Wilmington, DE. DuPont is a specialty materials company reshaped by portfolio separations, with 2025 continuing net sales of $6.8B after the Qnity electronics spin-off and a focus on water, protection, industrial, healthcare, and advanced materials.

DuPont operates at public-company scale with $6.8B 2025 continuing net sales after Qnity spin, 24,000 employees, and a June 2026 market value around ~$20B. DuPont is a specialty materials company reshaped by portfolio separations, with 2025 continuing net sales of $6.8B after the Qnity electronics spin-off and a focus on water, protection, industrial, healthcare, and advanced materials. Its core operating areas include Water and Protection, Industrial Solutions, Healthcare, Advanced materials, Safety and construction, and related capabilities that make the company important to its industry.

The business is asset-intensive and operationally complex, so performance depends on commodity markets, regulated returns, manufacturing uptime, safety, capital projects, procurement, reliability, and disciplined execution. DuPont also has a meaningful technology agenda because field assets, plants, mines, stores, customers, traders, engineers, and corporate functions all depend on modern data and workflow systems.

For sellers, DuPont is a post-separation specialty materials buyer. The best entry points are not generic corporate pitches; they are measurable improvements in safety, uptime, margin, customer reliability, energy efficiency, field productivity, supply chain, analytics, cybersecurity, or capital-project delivery.

What does DuPont offer?

DuPont offers Tyvek, Kevlar, Nomex, Water filtration, Ion exchange, Adhesives, and adjacent services or operating capabilities tied to its core assets.

  • Tyvek· Water and Protection
  • Kevlar· Industrial Solutions
  • Nomex· Healthcare
  • Water filtration· Advanced materials
  • Ion exchange· Safety and construction
  • Adhesives· Adhesives and resins
  • Healthcare materials· Portfolio separation
  • Industrial films and resins· Water and Protection

How does DuPont make money?

DuPont makes money through specialty product sales, application engineering, recurring industrial demand, pricing, productivity, licensing, and portfolio management.

DuPont's business model is based on specialty product sales, application engineering, recurring industrial demand, pricing, productivity, licensing, and portfolio management. Pricing is not a public SaaS-style tier list; it is set through regulated tariffs, commodity benchmarks, customer contracts, spot prices, negotiated industrial terms, or project economics depending on the business line.

The main economic drivers are volume, utilization, price/cost spreads, capital efficiency, operating reliability, maintenance discipline, working capital, customer demand, and regulatory or commodity-market conditions. In 2025 the company reported $6.8B 2025 continuing net sales after Qnity spin, giving it meaningful purchasing power but also a strong bias toward projects with quantified operating impact.

Growth depends on the same practical levers that shape large industrial buyers: safer operations, better uptime, lower unit cost, better forecasting, tighter procurement, faster engineering, cleaner data, and improved customer or asset performance. Vendors should connect proposals to those levers and expect technical, procurement, legal, security, and finance review.

Who leads DuPont?

DuPont is led by Lori D. Koch, with senior leadership including Edward D. Breen, Antonella Franzen, Alexa Dembek.

  • Lori D. KochChief Executive OfficerCEO since 2024Leads post-spin DuPont strategy and operational execution.
  • Edward D. BreenExecutive ChairmanExecutive chairman after CEO serviceProvides portfolio and separation strategy oversight.
  • Antonella FranzenChief Financial OfficerCFO since 2024Leads finance and investor communications.
  • Alexa DembekChief Technology and Sustainability OfficerSenior executive leadershipLeads technology, innovation, and sustainability.

How do you contact DuPont's leadership?

DuPont publishes investor, media, supplier, customer, or contact-form routes, but it does not publish a verified personal executive email pattern for the leaders below. Use the official investor/contact route for DuPont rather than guessed personal addresses.

Email formatOfficial investor/contact page is public; personal executive email format not verified

How much funding has DuPont raised?

DuPont is a mature public company, not a VC-backed startup. It trades as DD, had a market capitalization of ~$20B in the June 2026 snapshot used here, and funds operations through operating cash flow, public debt/equity access, and industry-specific capital programs.

DuPont does not have a current venture funding total. The relevant capital history is its public listing, operating cash flow, debt-market access, dividends or buybacks where applicable, acquisitions, portfolio actions, and reinvestment in long-lived assets.

As of the June 2026 market snapshot used for this profile, DD was valued at about ~$20B. The company reported $6.8B 2025 continuing net sales after Qnity spin, which is the operating scale sellers should use when thinking about budget capacity, procurement maturity, and the size of projects that can matter.

Seller signal: DuPont can buy at enterprise and industrial scale, but budget owners will demand measurable business cases. Strong proposals quantify safety, uptime, throughput, margin, asset integrity, grid/customer reliability, procurement savings, emissions, or working-capital improvement.

How did DuPont get here?

DuPont's path is a public-company operating history shaped by founding roots, portfolio changes, leadership transitions, and 2025-2026 market conditions.

  1. 1802DuPont foundedE.I. du Pont starts the company as a gunpowder manufacturer.
  2. 2017DowDuPont mergerDuPont combines with Dow before separations.
  3. 2019New DuPont separationDuPont emerges as an independent specialty company.
  4. 2024Lori Koch becomes CEOKoch takes over as chief executive.
  5. 2025Qnity spin-off targeted and completedDuPont separates its electronics business as Qnity.
  6. 2025$6.8B continuing salesDuPont reports continuing net sales after portfolio realignment.

Who are DuPont's competitors?

DuPont competes with public and private companies across specialty materials and industrial technologies, adjacent assets, capital projects, customers, labor, technology, and commodity or regulated markets.

  • 3MDiversified materials and industrial technology competitor.
  • HoneywellIndustrial technology competitor in safety, automation, and materials.
  • EastmanSpecialty materials and chemicals peer.
  • CelaneseEngineered materials and chemicals competitor.
  • PPGCoatings and specialty materials competitor.

DuPont — frequently asked questions

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