You can learn a lot about a country’s ambitions from a satellite photo. In June 2026, one such image — a full-scale aircraft shape sitting on a measurement range near Hyderabad — told the world that India’s long-promised stealth fighter is no longer just a PowerPoint slide.
The aircraft is the AMCA, the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft: a twin-engine, single-seat stealth jet meant to become the first fifth-generation fighter India builds for itself. The satellite caught a full-scale engineering model at an outdoor radar cross-section range — the place where a stealth design finds out whether it is actually stealthy.
For a programme that has spent years being doubted, it was a quietly dramatic moment. And it arrived at an awkward time, with India’s great rival on the cusp of fielding a stealth fighter of its own.
QUICK FACTS
Aircraft: AMCA (Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft)
Type: Twin-engine, single-seat 5th-gen stealth fighter
For: Indian Air Force (India’s first indigenous stealth jet)
Spotted: June 2026 — full-scale model at an RCS test range near Hyderabad
Prototype rollout: Planned late 2026 / early 2027
First flight / induction: Targeted 2028 / mid-2030s
What the satellite actually saw
The imagery, picked apart by open-source analysts, showed a full-scale AMCA engineering model at an outdoor radar cross-section test facility associated with India’s Research Centre Imarat, near the Dundigal air base outside Hyderabad. Such ranges exist to measure exactly how visible an airframe is to radar — the single most important question for any stealth design.
Analysts were quick to note that the model appears to reflect an earlier configuration of the AMCA, before the programme adopted the diverterless supersonic inlets seen in more recent designs. In other words: this is a real, physical milestone, but the jet is still evolving on the drawing board even as the structure is being measured.

A homegrown jet, with borrowed engines — for now
The AMCA is being developed by India’s Aeronautical Development Agency with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited as the lead manufacturer. The first prototypes are expected to fly on the General Electric F414 — the same engine family that powers India’s Tejas Mk2 — while India pursues a far harder prize: a powerful indigenous engine in the 110–120 kN class, the technology that has eluded almost every nation that has tried.
The official roadmap is ambitious: a prototype rollout around late 2026 or early 2027, a first flight targeted for 2028, and squadron service sometime in the mid-2030s. Aviation programmes rarely hit those dates. But the gap between “concept” and “measured full-scale article” is the gap India has just visibly crossed.

The clock New Delhi is watching
Context is everything here. Pakistan has agreed to acquire China’s J-35 stealth fighter and could field it within a couple of years. India does not want to be the South Asian power without a stealth jet — and its effort to buy more Rafales has stalled over technology and source-code disputes. The AMCA is, increasingly, the answer India is counting on.
A full-scale model on a radar range is not a flying fighter. But it is proof that the programme is moving from paper into metal — and that the race for stealth over South Asia has well and truly begun.
Sources: Defence Security Asia; India TV News; OpIndia; Aerospace Global News; Wikipedia (Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft)




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