The F-47 — A Sixth-Generation Air Dominance Jet Fighter
This aircraft may break the Pentagon tradition of over budget and behind schedule.
By: Dave Patterson | April 2, 2025 | 636 Words

(Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
The glory days of fighter aircraft dogfights are not gone — just different. On March 21, President Donald Trump announced from the Oval Office that the US Air Force had selected a winner in the Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) sixth-generation jet fighter competition: the Boeing Company’s F-47, which beat out Lockheed. In the future, an adversary will be killed by a missile fired from beyond visual range by a fighter never seen.
The F-47 Takes the Stage
The US Air Force believes this jet represents a big leap in technological capability needed to dominate such near-peer adversaries as China, which is surging ahead. With an already impressive inventory of air-to-air and air-to-ground manned fighters, the United States is still in a competition for military capability survival.
Yet few believe the People’s Liberation Army Air Force currently has an edge over US stealth and electronic mission systems. Furthermore, from an operational capability perspective, an avid fan base believes the F-22 Raptor air superiority fighter remains unsurpassed. However, most of the others are fourth-generation technology. The first F-22A took to the air on its maiden flight in 1997, 28 years ago. Though the plan was for a fleet exceeding 700 aircraft, only 195 were produced for the US Air Force. (Of those, only about 150 are fully mission-capable today.) The fighter’s claim to fame is that it can climb to altitudes of more than 50,000 feet and maintain supersonic speeds higher than 1.5 Mach without using an afterburner.
However, the F-22 is feeling its age, so the need to find a replacement is now. Enter the F-47, a tailless, stealthy fighter, with high speeds in the 2.0 plus Mach range and longer range, based on what information has been made public. In a statement, Air Force Chief of Staff David Alvin explained, “With the F-47, we are not just building another fighter – we are shaping the future of warfare and putting our enemies on notice. This platform will be the most advanced, lethal, and adaptable fighter ever developed – designed to outpace, outmaneuver, and outmatch any adversary that dares to challenge our brave Airmen.”
Lower Cost, Quicker Development
The F-47 is unique in this age of weapon systems being over cost and behind schedule because critical technologies make the project more capable sooner. Alvin described the progress already made: “For the past five years, the [experimental] X-planes for this aircraft have been quietly laying the foundation for the F-47 — flying hundreds of hours, testing cutting-edge concepts, and proving that we can push the envelope of technology with confidence.” Reports are that the F-47 will take advantage of already developed coatings on the B-21 Raider, America’s new strategic stealth bomber. This would lower the cost of achieving a stealthy airframe skin.
Alvin maintains the F-47 “will cost less and be more adaptable to future threats – and we will have more of the F-47s in our inventory.” With America’s adversaries working diligently to increase the quantity of their forces, having a compelling number of sixth-generation fighters is crucial. Another critical aspect of any new fighter capability was addressed when Alvin explained, “This platform is designed with a ‘built to adapt’ mindset and will take significantly less manpower and infrastructure to deploy.”
Because of the early prototyping of new technologies, Alvin asserted that “the F-47 will fly during President Trump’s administration.” If that can be achieved, it will be an amazing accomplishment.
The views expressed are those of the author and not of any other affiliate.
- The US Air Force has awarded a contract to build the F-47, a new jet fighter.
- The F-47 represents a big leap in technological capability needed to dominate such near-peer adversaries as China, which is surging ahead.
- Prototyping of the F-47 has already taken place, indicating the plane could fly while President Trump is still in office.