America’s New Combat Drones Are Coming In Under Budget

par | Mar 27, 2026 | Aviation militaire, Nouvelles | 0 commentaire

In U.S. defence procurement, hitting your cost target is newsworthy. Beating it significantly is almost unheard of. Yet that is exactly what Air Force officials are claiming about the Collaborative Combat Aircraft programme — the effort to build autonomous drone wingmen that can fly alongside crewed fighters into the most dangerous airspace on earth.

"Not only have we met the goal," said Col. Timothy Helfrich, the programme's acquisition executive, "we are doing much better than that." The original target, set by former Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall, was to produce CCA drones at roughly one-third the cost of an F-35. That figure implied a unit price somewhere in the range of $25–30 million. What the Air Force is actually seeing is considerably lower.

Why "Cheaper Than Expected" Is Actually a Big Deal

Modern fighter programmes are notorious for cost overruns. The F-35 famously ballooned to over $400 billion in total programme costs. The B-21 Raider, the Air Force's new stealth bomber, has also seen cost growth. Against that backdrop, a programme that is actively beating its cost goals — and doing so in the early stages of development, before the notoriously expensive production phase — is genuinely unusual.

The reason, officials say, lies in how the CCA was designed from the start. Unlike crewed aircraft, which must meet stringent survivability standards for the human pilot inside, CCAs are designed to be attritable — meaning they can be lost in combat and replaced without catastrophic strategic cost. This simplifies the design, reduces material requirements, and removes the need for ejection seats, life support systems, and the reinforced cockpit structures that add significant weight and cost to crewed aircraft.

GA-ASI MQ-20 Avenger unmanned combat aircraft
The GA-ASI MQ-20 Avenger — one of the CCA candidate aircraft currently in testing. The Air Force says the overall programme is beating its cost-per-unit targets by a significant margin. (General Atomics / Wikimedia Commons)

What Happens in 2026

This year, the Air Force is continuing flight tests of two competing prototypes — the YFQ-42A and YFQ-44A — while preparing to award further design work for a second increment of the programme to a broader pool of industry competitors. The goal is to eventually purchase CCAs in the hundreds, potentially transforming the ratio of crewed to uncrewed aircraft in the Air Force's fighter fleet.

There is still a significant challenge ahead: convincing Congress that the Air Force has solid plans for basing, logistics, and sustaining hundreds of large autonomous aircraft. Senators and representatives who saw the F-35 programme spiral in cost are understandably sceptical of early optimism. The Air Force will need to keep demonstrating not just that CCAs are cheap to build — but that they are cheap to operate, maintain, and replace at scale.

The Bigger Picture

If the cost numbers hold, the implications are profound. An air force that can field two, three, or four autonomous wingmen for every crewed fighter — at a price the Pentagon can actually sustain — would look fundamentally different from anything that exists today. Adversaries planning against U.S. air power would face not just highly trained pilots in advanced jets, but swarms of expendable, intelligent machines that can absorb losses and keep fighting.

The era of the single-pilot, single-aircraft dogfighter may be giving way to something far more complex — and, for the first time in a long while, far cheaper than expected.

Sources: Air & Space Forces Magazine; CSIS; U.S. Air Force

Related Questions

What is the Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program?

The Collaborative Combat Aircraft programme is a US Air Force effort to build autonomous drone wingmen that fly alongside crewed fighters into contested airspace. Cheaper and expendable, these uncrewed aircraft are meant to multiply combat power. In 2026 officials said the programme was beating its cost targets, and the jets were cleared for production as the YFQ-42A and YFQ-44A.

How much does a CCA drone cost?

The original target was roughly one-third the cost of an F-35, implying about 25 to 30 million dollars per drone. Air Force officials said in 2026 they were beating that target by a significant margin. Removing the cockpit, ejection seat and life-support systems simplifies the design and cuts cost compared with crewed fighters.

Why are uncrewed combat aircraft cheaper than fighters?

Uncrewed aircraft omit the cockpit, ejection seat, life-support systems and reinforced structures that protect a pilot, which removes weight, complexity and cost. Because losing one carries no human risk, they can be built to lower survivability standards and treated as expendable, making large fleets affordable in ways crewed jets like the B-21 Raider can never match.

Why do US fighter programs usually run over budget?

Military aircraft programmes are notorious for cost overruns driven by complex requirements, advanced technology and long development. The F-35 grew to over 400 billion dollars in total programme cost. Against that backdrop, the CCA drone programme beating its per-unit cost target was considered a notable and unusual achievement.

What are the YFQ-42A and YFQ-44A?

The YFQ-42A and YFQ-44A are the two competing CCA prototype drones the US Air Force flight-tested in 2026, built by rival contractors. The Air Force plans to eventually buy CCAs in the hundreds, potentially transforming the ratio of crewed to uncrewed aircraft, while still needing to convince Congress on basing and support plans.

Related Posts

A Cheesesteak, a MiG-21, and Mach 1

A Cheesesteak, a MiG-21, and Mach 1

Somewhere over the Florida coast, at better than a thousand miles an hour, a man in an oxygen helmet unwrapped a cheesesteak, took a bite, and pulled a face you don’t usually see outside a rollercoaster. That, apparently, is what it now takes to sell a sandwich....

0 commentaire

Envoyer un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *