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The U.S. Navy is developing an aircraft carrier-based unmanned aircraft system (UAS) to perform aerial refueling and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) missions. The MQ-25 Stingray, as currently conceivedif the system enters production in FY2026 as planned, would be the U.S. Department of Defense's (DOD's) first unmanned tanker and the Navy's first carrier-based unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). Congress has expressed an interest in the Navy's efforts to develop a carrier-based drone and in the future structure of the carrier air wing.
According to the Navy's FY2025FY2026 budget submission to Congress, by providing the carrier air wing with a dedicated aerial tanker, the MQ-25 would extend the effective operating range of crewed fighter aircraft in the air wing and reduce the strain on the fighter aircraft that are currently modified to provide mid-air refueling capabilities for other aircraft in the air wing. In congressional testimony, Navy officials have further described the Stingray as a "pathfinder" to the future carrier air wing—one in which the Navy expects that UAVs could potentially engage in a variety of missions.
In its FY2025 budget submission, the Navy requested $898 million in what they describe as the "air wing of the future"—one in which UAVs could potentially conduct various missions.
For FY2026, the Navy requested $1.04 billion in discretionary procurement and research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) funding for the MQ-25, according to an annual summary of the budget published by the DOD Comptroller. If approved by Congress, the Navy's FY2025FY2026 request would fund the procurement of three MQ-25 aircraft and represent the first year of low-rate initial production (LRIP). As of the Navy's FY2025 budget submission, the of the aircraft. The MQ-25 program of record consisted ofcurrently estimates a total of 76 aircraft, including 67 operational aircraft and nine test and developmental aircraft.
In 1999, the Navy and the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) began to develop a multi-mission, carrier-based unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV), a goal Congress supported in the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (P.L. 106-398, §220). Over the following decade, the Navy, DOD, and Congress considered various possible configurations of a carrier-based combat UAV and the types of missions in which itthe vehicle might be able to engage. These initiatives resulted in the Unmanned Carrier Launched Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) program, the requirements for which DOD initially approved in 2011 and revised in 2013.
In 2016, the Navy redirected its efforts to developshifted development of a carrier-based UAV away from a focus on combat missions and announced that a new program,from combat to refueling missions and announced that the Carrier Based Aerial Refueling System (CBARS), would replace UCLASS. In a 2016 summary of the program, the Navy said that the MQ-25 would relieve the Navy F/A-18 E18E/F Super Hornet fighters of having to conduct air-to-air refueling missions for carrier air wings, allowing the Super Hornet fighters to focus on combat missions and extending the operational range of strike aircraft.
The Navy selected Boeing to produce the Stingray aircraft in 2018 and awarded the company a fixed-price contract for the initial engineering development model (EDMmanufacturing development (EMD) aircraft. Boeing delivered a static test aircraft for testing in 2024 and, according to congressional testimony in 2024that year, Navy officials planned for deliveries of the EDMEMD aircraft to commence in 2025. Separately, a Boeing-owned Stingray demonstrator, the "T1" (see Figure 1), conducted its first flight in 2019 and its first mid-air refueling of another aircraft in 2021. The T1 lacked some features of the developmental and production aircraft.
Source: Samantha Jenkins, Defense Visual Information Service. Note: The Boeing-owned MQ-25 Stingray "T1" demonstrator in 2021. |
The primary elements of the MQ-25 Stingray program are the air vehicle and the mission control station. The MQ-25 air vehicle remains in development, and the Navy has not publicly released detailed technical specifications for the aircraft. The Navy's stated objective for the Stingray is for it to be able to deliver at least 14,000 pounds of fuel and as much as 16,000 pounds of fuel at a distance of 500 nautical miles (575 miles).
Boeing said in 2021 that it would build the MQ-25 at MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Mascoutah, IL, and in 2024 the company opened a $200-million production factory there. Boeing selected the Rolls-Royce AE 3007N turbofan engine, produced in Indianapolis, IN, to power the MQ-25. Other contractors include BAE Systems, which is providing the vehicle management system and other components. The Stingray will reportedly use the Cobham Aerial Refueling Store, the same equipment used by tanker-configured F/A-18 E18E/F fighters, for mid-air refueling.
The Unmanned Carrier Aviation Mission Control System (UMCS, or MD-5) is the planned ground control station for the MQ-25 Stingray, as well as potentially for future UAVs that the Navy could integrate into the carrier air wing. According to the Navy's FY2025FY2026 budget submission, the UMCS areis to consist of the hardware, software, and networks that allow pilots to plan and conduct flight missions, including the consoles, beyond line-of-sight communications, and the Lockheed Martin-developed Multi Domain Control Capability (MDCX) software. The Navy is procuring both ship-installed (MD-5C) and shore-based (MD-5D) versions of the UMCS, as well as a mobile version (MD-5E) for carriers that do not have the full control station installed. The Navy installed its first UMCS on the USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) in 2024.
The DOD Office of Inspector General (DODIG), in a 2023 audit of the MQ-25 program, highlighted the potential risks associated with the Navy's development and production schedule. One risk it focused onthe DODIG identified was the Navy's plan to begin LRIP before the service had completed its developmental and operational tests of the production-representative MQ-25 aircraft. The DODIG recommended that the Navy either delay its decision to start LRIP "until the Program Office conducts sufficient tests and evaluations," or update its risk management documentation for the program. In response, Navy officials underscored what they described as the importance of the MQ-25 program, and said that the program office had updated its risk assessment and delayed program milestone decisions.
In 2023, the Navy approved a new schedule for the MQ-25 program that replaced a schedule adopted at the program's outset and postponed milestones by one to threeapproximately two years. According to DOD's December 2023 Selected Acquisition Report (SAR) for the MQ-25, the Navy postponed the start of flight tests of the EDMEMD aircraft from 2022 to 2025 and the start of LRIP from 2023 to 2025delayed initial operational capability (IOC) from 2025 to 2026. The DOD SAR attributed the delays in the MQ-25 program to multiple factors, including issues with aspects of the aircraft's design and build process and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Boeing suppliers.
Additional delays to the MQ-25 program remain a possibility. In its 2024 report on the Department of Defense Appropriations Bill, 2025 (S. 4921; S.Rept. 118-204), the Senate Committee on Appropriations (SAC) reported that, based on the committee's consultations with the MQ-25 program office, the Navy may postpone the first flight of the test aircraft to early 2026. In early 2025, Navy officials reportedly reiterated that the service planned to fly the MQ-25 in 2025, and said that the Navy would submit a revised testing schedule to the DOD Director of Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E).
The Government Accountability Office (GAO), in its 2024 Weapon Systems Annual Assessment, estimated the total acquisition cost of the MQ-25 Stingray program at approximately $14.9 billion and the acquisition unit cost at $195 million.
In its FY2026 budget submission to Congress, the Navy said it was "implementing an evolutionary acquisition strategy to develop, fly, deploy, and evolve" the MQ-25. The Navy also reported that it expected to achieve initial operational capability with the MQ-25 by the end of FY2027, not in 2026 as it previously planned. Navy officials have reportedly stated that the service still plans to fly the MQ-25 in 2025, and according to statements by Boeing officials in July 2025, the company has begun ground tests of the MQ-25. In its FY2025 congressional budget submission, the Navy requested $898 million for the MQ-25 Stingray program, including $683.1 million in procurement funding—$553 million for three LRIP aircraft and $130.1 million for the UMCS—and $214.9 million in RDT&E funding. Due to the aforementioned schedule changes, FY2025 would mark the first year of procurement of the LRIPThe Government Accountability Office (GAO), in its 2025 Weapon Systems Annual Assessment, estimated the total acquisition cost of the MQ-25 Stingray program at approximately $15.9 billion and the acquisition unit cost at $209 million, a 4% increase from a prior estimate. The GAO report cited the Navy's plan to begin LRIP before it completed testing the production-representative aircraft as a potential risk for future "cost increases and further delays."
FY2025-Enacted Budget
In its FY2025 congressional budget submission, the Navy requested $898.0 million for the MQ-25 Stingray program and UMCS in part to begin production of the first three LRIP MQ-25 aircraft. In the Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (P.L. 118-159), Congress authorized the requested funding for the MQ-25 without changes.
The In the Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025 (P.L. 119-4), a full-year continuing resolution, did not include an accompanying explanatory statement specifying defense funding allocations at the line-item level. As such, the final FY2025 appropriation for the MQ-25 program has yet to be determined. The SAC-reported version of the 2025 defense appropriations bill (S. 4921) would have reduced funding for the MQ-25 program by approximately $473.4 million, eliminating funds for the first three LRIP aircraft. In its report accompanying the SAC-reported version of the bill (S.Rept. 118-204), the committee cited the program delays, and concerns associated with the Navy's schedule, as reasons for the proposed reductions. The House-passed version of the defense appropriations bill (H.R. 8774) would have funded the program without changes to the Navy's request.
In its FY2026 congressional budget submission, the Navy requested approximately $1.04 billion in procurement and RDT&E funding, including funding to procure the first three LRIP aircraft that it had sought in its FY2025 budget request. Additionally, in the 2025 reconciliation legislation known as the One Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21), Congress provided $100 million in FY2025 funding to "accelerate production of MQ-25 aircraft." In its FY2026 budget justification, DOD said it planned to apply such funding to procuring the first three aircraft in FY2026.
Congress may, as part of its oversight of Navy programs, consider the following issues: