Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-31 Foxhound — History, Specs & Stories

Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-31 Foxhound
Aircraft MuseumInterceptorMiG-31

Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-31
“Foxhound”

The fastest combat aircraft still flying — a Mach-2.83 long-range interceptor whose 1981 Zaslon radar was the world’s first operational fighter PESA, and which today carries Russia’s Kinzhal hypersonic missile.

Mach 2.83Fastest combat jet in service
1981World’s first PESA fighter radar
~900 kmRadar picket line, four jets datalinked
R-37M200 km-class air-to-air missile
Photo: Alan Wilson · CC BY-SA 2.0
RoleLong-range interceptorEraCold War – presentMotor2 × Soloviev D-30F6OriginUSSR · Mikoyan-GurevichStatusFrontline · Russia onlyCan a civilian fly the MiG-31?
A História

The interceptor built to fix the Foxbat

The MiG-31 was born from the shortcomings of its famous ancestor. The MiG-25 Foxbat could sprint to Mach 2.8, but it couldn’t look down and shoot down: its radar was blinded by ground clutter, it handled poorly at low altitude, and its thirsty turbojets gave it short legs. Against the low-flying bombers and cruise missiles of the 1970s, the Foxbat was nearly useless. The answer was the Ye-155MP — a new aircraft that only looked like a Foxbat.

First flown on 16 September 1975 by test pilot Alexander Fedotov and in service from 1981, the MiG-31 kept the Foxbat’s brute speed but added everything it lacked: a second crewman to work the sensors, genuine afterburning turbofans that could sustain Mach 2.83 without wrecking themselves, and above all the Zaslon radar — the world’s first electronically-scanned array to enter service on a fighter. The sprinter had become a long-range interception system.

Unlike the widely-exported MiG-21, the Foxhound was never sold abroad in numbers — only the Soviet Union, then Russia, and briefly Kazakhstan have flown it. Around 500 were built before production ended in 1994, and roughly 130 modernised MiG-31BM/BSM remain the backbone of Russian long-range air defence. Today the type is globally famous again as the launch platform for the Kh-47M2 Kinzhal — and, at Mach 2.83, it is simply the fastest combat aircraft still flying anywhere in the world.

Four MiG-31s, datalinked, could sweep a corridor almost 900 kilometres wide — a networked hunting pack decades before the West coined “network-centric warfare.”The radar that changed the rules — Zaslon and the first PESA fighter
01The MiG-31’s Zaslon radar: how the first operational fighter PESA rewrote air defence

When the MiG-31 entered service in 1981, Western fighters like the F-14 and F-15 still swept the sky with mechanically-rotated radar dishes. The Foxhound’s Zaslon S-800 (NATO “Flash Dance”) had no moving antenna at all: it steered its beam electronically in milliseconds, the first passive electronically-scanned array (PESA) ever fielded on a fighter. It could track around ten targets and engage several at once with the long-range R-33 missile — and, crucially, it could look down and pluck a low-flying cruise missile out of ground clutter, the exact task that had defeated the MiG-25.

Netted together by datalink, four MiG-31s could patrol a barrier nearly 900 km wide across the Arctic approaches to the USSR — each jet feeding the others a shared picture. The modernised Zaslon-M of the MiG-31BM is claimed to reach much further still, feeding today’s very-long-range R-37M. Treat the biggest range numbers with caution, but the through-line is real: from the Cold War Foxhound to the missile-truck of the 2020s, the Foxhound has always been a radar first and an airframe second.


Design & Engineering

What makes it special

01

The Zaslon PESA radar

The MiG-31’s heart is the Zaslon S-800 — the world’s first passive electronically-scanned array to enter service on a fighter, in 1981. With no moving antenna it steers its beam electronically, tracking around ten targets and engaging several simultaneously, and it can look down to kill low-flying cruise missiles in clutter. The modernised Zaslon-M feeds today’s R-37M very-long-range missiles.

02

D-30F6 turbofans

Where the MiG-25 used thirsty turbojets, the Foxhound carries two Soloviev D-30F6 afterburning turbofans of about 152 kN each. They let it sustain Mach 2.83 and even supercruise without tearing themselves apart — giving the MiG-31 genuine long range and endurance rather than a single wasteful dash.

03

Two crew, one network

A pilot flies while a dedicated weapons officer works the Zaslon in the back seat. Linked by the APD-518 datalink, four MiG-31s form a single picket line nearly 900 km wide, each sharing its radar picture — a networked hunting pack built decades before “network-centric warfare” had a name.

02The MiG-31’s engines: why turbofans beat the Foxbat’s turbojets

The MiG-25’s R-15 turbojets were optimised for one thing — a flat-out Mach 2.8 dash — and they drank fuel so fast that sustained high-speed flight risked damaging them. The MiG-31’s Soloviev D-30F6 afterburning turbofans changed the equation: more efficient at cruise, they let the Foxhound hold Mach 2.83 at altitude and reach out to a combat radius of around 720 km at high speed, or roughly 1,450 km subsonic. It is the difference between a sprinter that must dash and recover, and an interceptor that can actually patrol.

03The MiG-31’s picket line: four jets, one 900-kilometre radar wall

A single MiG-31 is formidable; four are a system. Using the APD-518 datalink, a flight of four Foxhounds could space themselves out and share a single fused radar picture, sweeping a corridor almost 900 km wide across the northern approaches to the Soviet Union. One jet could detect a target and hand it to another to engage. In an era when Western fighters still fought largely as individuals, this networked, look-down barrier was a genuinely radical piece of air-defence doctrine — and it is the direct ancestor of the datalinked missile-launch tactics Russia uses with the R-37M today.


Technical Data

Full specifications

Airframe & Performance

Equipe
2 (pilot + weapons officer)
Comprimento
~22.6 m
Envergadura
~13.46 m
Altura
~6.15 m
Max takeoff weight
~46,200 kg
Max speed
Mach 2.83 · ~3,000 km/h
Teto de serviço
~20,600 m
Raio de combate
~720 km at Mach 2.35
Ferry range
~3,300 km

Propulsion & Systems

Engines
2 × Soloviev D-30F6
Thrust
~93 kN dry / ~152 kN reheat (each)
Radar
Zaslon / Zaslon-M PESA
Missiles
R-33; up to 6 × R-37M (BM)
Cannon
1 × 23 mm GSh-6-23
First flight
16 September 1975
Unit cost
~$30–50 million (estimate)
Cost per flight hour
No reliable public figure
04The MiG-31’s operating costs: what open sources actually show

Hard numbers for the MiG-31 are scarce and unreliable. It was and remains a Soviet-then-Russian state product that was never openly exported, so there is no export price list to anchor an estimate. Figures circulating online range from soft estimates of roughly $30–50 million per airframe to an often-repeated but unsourced “$100 million” — treat all of them as guesswork. No credible cost-per-flight-hour figure exists in open sources either. What is certain is that the MiG-31 is un-buildable: production ended in 1994 and cannot be restarted, so every jet lost is gone for good — a fleet Russia keeps flying precisely because it can no longer make more.


Timeline

Fifty years of the Foxhound

Early 1970s

The Ye-155MP programme

Soviet designers begin an aircraft to fix the MiG-25’s inability to look down and shoot down low-flying targets.

1975

First flight

Test pilot Alexander Fedotov takes the prototype up on 16 September 1975.

1981

Service & the first PESA

The MiG-31 enters PVO service, carrying the Zaslon radar — the world’s first operational fighter PESA.

1980s

The 900 km wall

Four datalinked MiG-31s adopt the doctrine of a continuous radar picket line across the Arctic approaches.

1990

The MiG-31B

An improved variant adds aerial refuelling and upgraded avionics.

1994

Production ends

After roughly 500–519 built, the line closes for good — the type can no longer be manufactured.

Mid-2000s–2010s

The BM upgrade

The modernised MiG-31BM/BSM brings Zaslon-M, a glass cockpit and the very-long-range R-37M missile.

2018

Kinzhal revealed

Russia unveils the MiG-31K carrying the Kh-47M2 Kinzhal air-launched missile.

2022–

Combat over Ukraine

MiG-31s reportedly fire R-37M air-to-air missiles and MiG-31K launch Kinzhals — both widely reported but contested.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

Twelve things to know about the Foxhound

First of its kind

The world’s first PESA fighter

In 1981 the MiG-31 fielded an electronically-scanned radar years before the West.

Read the full story
When the MiG-31 entered service in 1981, its Zaslon radar was the first passive electronically-scanned array (PESA) ever fielded on a fighter anywhere in the world. Western fighters would keep using mechanically-scanned dishes for years. It was one of the few areas where Soviet radar technology genuinely led the West, and it turned the MiG-31 from a fast airframe into a true interception system.
Doctrine

The 900-kilometre wall

Four datalinked MiG-31s could sweep a corridor almost 900 km wide.

Read the full story
The Foxhound was designed to fight in fours. Linked by datalink, a flight of four MiG-31s could spread out and share a single fused radar picture, screening a barrier nearly 900 km wide across the Arctic approaches to the Soviet Union. One jet detected, another engaged — networked air defence decades before the phrase “network-centric warfare” existed.
Fixing the Foxbat

Looking down at last

The MiG-31 could do the one thing the MiG-25 never could.

Read the full story
The MiG-25 could fly blindingly fast but was defeated by low-flying targets: its radar drowned in ground clutter. The MiG-31’s Zaslon was built specifically to look down and shoot down — to pluck a cruise missile skimming the earth out of the clutter and destroy it. It is the single capability that justified building a whole new aircraft.
The BM

The “AWACS killer”

The modernised MiG-31BM carries the very-long-range R-37M missile.

Read the full story
The mid-2000s MiG-31BM upgrade paired the improved Zaslon-M radar with the R-37M, a missile in the 200-kilometre-plus class designed to threaten high-value support aircraft — tankers, radar planes and AWACS — from far outside their escorts’ reach. Its exact performance is closely held and often overstated, so treat specific range figures with caution.
Contested

The longest shot in history?

Claims of a 200 km-plus air-to-air kill are widely repeated but unverified.

Read the full story
Since 2022 there have been reports of extremely long-range air-to-air kills attributed to the R-37M, some cited at well over 200 km, occasionally called the longest air-to-air kill in history. These claims are contested, variously attributed to different aircraft, and not independently verified. What is clear is that the threat of the R-37M forced opposing pilots to fly lower and more cautiously.
Near space

Intercepting at the edge

With a ~20 km ceiling and a zoom climb, the MiG-31 reaches where few fighters can.

Read the full story
The MiG-31 cruises and fights at altitudes around 20,000 m, and in a zoom climb can briefly reach considerably higher — territory almost no other fighter can touch. This is what makes it credible against high, fast targets and, more recently, a useful first stage for launching missiles at the very edge of the atmosphere.
By design

It can’t dogfight — and doesn’t need to

The Foxhound is a straight-line missileer, not a turning fighter.

Read the full story
Big, heavy and built for speed and altitude, the MiG-31 is not an agile dogfighter and was never meant to be. Its job is to detect a target at enormous range, close at Mach 2-plus and destroy it with a long-range missile before the fight ever becomes a turning contest. Against the bombers and cruise missiles it was built to stop, that is exactly the right trade.
The missile truck

Carrying the Kinzhal

Since 2018 the MiG-31K has launched Russia’s Kh-47M2 Kinzhal.

Read the full story
Revealed in 2018, the MiG-31K variant carries a single Kh-47M2 Kinzhal, an air-launched ballistic missile Russia describes as “hypersonic.” The heavy, high-flying, fast Foxhound is an ideal launch platform, releasing the weapon high and fast to extend its reach. Kinzhal has been used against Ukraine since 2022; claims about its performance and about interceptions of it are both disputed.
Efficiency

Supercruise without reheat

The D-30F6 turbofans give sustained speed the MiG-25 never had.

Read the full story
Unlike the MiG-25’s thirsty turbojets, the MiG-31’s Soloviev D-30F6 afterburning turbofans are efficient enough to sustain very high speed — and reportedly to supercruise — without wrecking the engines. That efficiency is what converts raw speed into genuine range and endurance, turning a dash interceptor into one that can actually patrol.
Equipe

Two brains, one jet

A dedicated weapons officer works the radar while the pilot flies.

Read the full story
The MiG-31 carries a crew of two: a pilot up front and a weapons-systems officer in the back running the Zaslon radar and the missile engagement. Splitting the workload was essential — managing multiple simultaneous long-range tracks in the early 1980s was more than one person could do while flying a Mach-2.8 aircraft.
Still the fastest

The quickest combat jet flying

At Mach 2.83, nothing in frontline service is faster.

Read the full story
With the SR-71 long retired, the MiG-31 holds the title of the fastest combat aircraft still in service anywhere in the world. Decades after its first flight, no operational fighter or interceptor can out-run it in level flight — a Cold War design still setting the pace in the 2020s.
Un-buildable

Fighting with a jet it can no longer make

Production ended in 1994 and cannot be restarted.

Read the full story
Perhaps the strangest fact about the MiG-31 is that Russia fights with an aircraft it can no longer manufacture. The production line closed in 1994; the tooling, supply chains and skills are gone. Every Foxhound in the sky is a survivor of a fleet that can only shrink — which is exactly why Russia keeps modernising and flying the ones it has.

Gallery

The Foxhound in pictures

A MiG-31 Foxhound rotating off the runway  two D-30F6 turbofans in full reheat.
A MiG-31 Foxhound rotating off the runway — two D-30F6 turbofans in full reheat.Photo: Alexander Kopitar · CC BY-SA 4.0
A modernised MiG-31BM  Zaslon-M radar, glass cockpit and the R-37M missile.
A modernised MiG-31BM — Zaslon-M radar, glass cockpit and the R-37M missile.Photo: Andrei Shmatko · CC BY-SA 4.0
A MiG-31K carrying the Kh-47M2 Kinzhal air-launched missile beneath its belly.
A MiG-31K carrying the Kh-47M2 Kinzhal air-launched missile beneath its belly.Photo: Boevaya mashina · CC BY-SA 3.0
A MiG-31 armed with R-33 (AA-9) long-range missiles  the weapon Zaslon was built to guide.
A MiG-31 armed with R-33 (AA-9) long-range missiles — the weapon Zaslon was built to guide.Photo: U.S. DoD · Public domain
A Soviet Foxhound photographed air-to-air during the Cold War.
A Soviet Foxhound photographed air-to-air during the Cold War.Photo: U.S. DoD · Public domain
A MiG-31 in flight  the big, fast airframe that remains the quickest combat jet in service.
A MiG-31 in flight — the big, fast airframe that remains the quickest combat jet in service.Photo: U.S. DoD · Public domain

Watch

The Foxhound in motion

A documentary look at the MiG-31 — the Cold War interceptor still setting the pace.


Operations

Where the Foxhound flies


Combat Record

The fastest jet still in the fight

For most of its life the MiG-31’s job was deterrence — shadowing NATO patrols and guarding the Soviet, then Russian, frontiers rather than fighting. Since 2022 it has been widely reported firing R-37M air-to-air missiles and, as the MiG-31K, launching Kinzhal missiles over Ukraine. Treat the specific claims as contested: kill counts, record ranges and interception claims are all disputed and rarely independently verified.

Mach 2.83Fastest combat jet still flying
~500–519Built, 1975–1994 — none since
200 km+R-37M missile reach (claimed, contested)

Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the MiG-31

Can I fly in a MiG-31?
No. The MiG-31 is a frontline Russian military interceptor and has never been available to civilians. However, you can fly in several genuine military jets today — MiGFlug offers fighter-jet experiences, including supersonic flights. See migflug.com/flights-prices/.
How fast is the MiG-31?
Mach 2.83 (around 3,000 km/h) at altitude — the fastest combat aircraft still in service anywhere in the world.
Is the MiG-31 still in service?
Yes. Around 130 modernised MiG-31BM/BSM remain the backbone of Russian long-range air defence, and the MiG-31K carries the Kinzhal missile.
What is the Kinzhal missile?
The Kh-47M2 Kinzhal is an air-launched ballistic missile Russia describes as “hypersonic,” carried by the MiG-31K variant. It was revealed in 2018 and used against Ukraine from 2022; claims about its performance and interception are disputed.
What is the Zaslon radar?
The Zaslon S-800 was the world’s first passive electronically-scanned array (PESA) fielded on a fighter, in 1981. It tracks around ten targets, engages several at once, and can look down to kill low-flying targets in clutter.
How is the MiG-31 different from the MiG-25?
The MiG-31 is the MiG-25’s successor: it adds look-down/shoot-down radar, a second crewman, efficient turbofans and long-range missiles — turning a fast but limited sprinter into a genuine long-range interception system.

Sources & Further Reading

Every fact, checked

  • Airforce TechnologyMiG-31 airframe, radar and weapons overview (note: their cannon calibre is misstated).
  • 19FortyFiveOrigins of the Foxhound and its 2020s status as an un-buildable but still-vital interceptor.
  • CSIS Missile ThreatThe Kh-47M2 Kinzhal air-launched missile and the MiG-31K launch platform.
  • Military Watch MagazineThe R-37M very-long-range missile and modernised MiG-31BM (claims treated as contested).
  • MilitarnyiUkrainian assessment of MiG-31 and R-37M activity since 2022.
  • The National InterestContext on Russian MiG-31s briefly based in Syria (a hosting arrangement, not a Syrian operator).
  • The War Zone (TWZ)MiG-31 modernisation, Kinzhal operations and the type’s continuing role.
  • The Aviation Geek ClubZaslon PESA radar history and MiG-31 development background.