The attack helicopter has spent the last few years being written off. Ukraine’s skies, thick with man-portable missiles and cheap drones, have looked like an unkind place for a low, slow gunship. Europe’s answer is not to retire its Tiger — but to rebuild it almost from the avionics out.
On 19 June, Airbus Helicopters laid out fresh detail on the Tiger Mk III, the deep mid-life upgrade it is developing for the French and Spanish armed forces. The headline is not more armour or more speed. It is sensors, software, a new French missile, and the ability to fight alongside drones.
QUICK FACTS
| Programme | Tiger Mk III — a deep mid-life upgrade |
| Operators | France and Spain |
| Fleet | 67 French + 18 Spanish helicopters (85 total) |
| New kit | New targeting & networking suites; drone teaming |
| New missile | MAST-F, replacing the Hellfire II |
| Milestone | “Helicopter zero” test bed flying; Mk III first flight targeted for 2026 |
What the Mk III actually changes
At its core, the Mk III is a complete mid-life upgrade: new targeting sensors and a new networking suite, shaped explicitly by the lessons of recent battlefields. The most forward-looking change is teaming. The upgraded Tiger is meant to work hand-in-glove with uncrewed aircraft — swapping targeting data with drones, using them as scouts, and coordinating attacks so the crewed helicopter can stay further from danger.
It also gets a new sting. The French-developed MAST-F (Missile Air-Sol Tactique Futur) will replace the Hellfire II currently carried for anti-tank and ground-attack work — a sovereign European weapon for a sovereign European helicopter.

“Helicopter zero” and a 2026 first flight
The programme already has hardware on the ground. A dedicated test bed nicknamed “helicopter zero” is being used to shake out the new systems before they ever leave the runway, and Airbus is targeting the Mk III’s first flight in 2026. In all, 67 French Tiger HAD-F and 18 Spanish HAD-S helicopters are slated to be rebuilt to the new standard.
Why bother upgrading an old gunship?
It is a fair question, and not everyone answered it the same way: Germany, an original Tiger operator, walked away from the Mk III to pursue other options. France and Spain are betting the opposite — that the way to keep an attack helicopter relevant in the drone age is not to replace it, but to make it a node in a networked team, firing standoff weapons and letting cheaper, expendable drones take the most dangerous look.
It is also a statement of European self-reliance: a European helicopter, a European missile, European sensors. The Tiger, in other words, is not done. It is just growing a new set of claws.
Sources: The Aviationist; Airbus Helicopters; Janes; Army Recognition; Interesting Engineering.




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