Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor — History, Specs & Stories

Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor in flight
Aircraft MuseumAir-Superiority FighterF-22 Raptor

Lockheed Martin F-22
“Raptor”

The world’s first operational fifth-generation fighter — a stealthy, supercruising, thrust-vectoring air-dominance machine so advanced and so costly that only 195 were ever built, and U.S. law forbids selling a single one abroad.

195Built — then the line closed
Mach 1.8Supercruise, no afterburner
5th-genWorld’s first operational
2005–presentFrontline USAF service
Photo: Master Sgt. Andy Dunaway, U.S. Air Force · Public domain
RoleAir-superiority stealth fighterEraModern · fifth generationMotor2 × Pratt & Whitney F119OriginUSA · Lockheed Martin / BoeingStatusFrontline (USAF)Can a civilian fly the F-22?
Hikaye

The F-22 Raptor: first of the fifth generation

The F-22 Raptor is the world’s first operational fifth-generation fighter — the aircraft that defined what “fifth-gen” even means. It fused four capabilities no previous fighter combined: all-aspect stealth, supercruise (sustained supersonic flight without afterburner), thrust-vectoring super-maneuverability, and sensor fusion that blends radar, electronic-warfare and datalink information into a single picture for one pilot.

In exercises the Raptor has posted lopsided simulated kill ratios and has been called the most dominant air-superiority fighter ever fielded. Yet it arrived at the wrong moment: conceived to defeat Soviet fighter fleets, it entered service into an era of counter-insurgency wars where its air-to-air edge went largely unused.

Extreme cost and a 2011 production cap left the U.S. Air Force with fewer than 190 jets — a small, irreplaceable, export-banned force that remains America’s premier air-dominance asset while the sixth-generation NGAD is developed to replace it.

Built to defeat the Soviet Air Force, the Raptor entered a world with no peer to fight — and became the most dominant fighter that almost never fired a shot.The fighter ahead of its war — why the F-22 Raptor is unique
01The F-22 Raptor’s fifth-generation formula: what actually makes it “fifth-gen”

Before the Raptor, fighters were “fourth generation” — fast, agile and radar-equipped, but visible and reliant on numbers. The F-22 rewrote the definition by combining, in one airframe, four traits that had never been fielded together: a very low radar cross-section from all aspects, the ability to cruise supersonically without afterburner, thrust-vectoring maneuverability, and a computer that fuses every sensor into one clear tactical picture.

The result is an aircraft that can see first, shoot first and leave before it is ever detected. Every fifth-generation fighter since — the F-35, China’s J-20, Russia’s Su-57 — is measured against the template the F-22 Raptor set in 2005.


Design & Engineering

What makes the F-22 Raptor special

01

All-aspect stealth & internal carriage

The Raptor’s faceted, planform-aligned shaping, radar-absorbent materials and carefully aligned edges give it a very low radar cross-section from every angle. All primary weapons ride in internal bays — side and belly — so the jet stays clean and stealthy, with no external stores to betray it on an enemy scope.

02

Twin F119s: supercruise & thrust vectoring

Two Pratt & Whitney F119-PW-100 afterburning turbofans in the ~35,000-lb-thrust class let the Raptor supercruise at roughly Mach 1.8 without afterburner. Two-dimensional pitch-axis thrust-vectoring nozzles give it extraordinary nose-pointing authority and post-stall maneuverability.

03

Sensor fusion & AESA radar

O AN/APG-77 active electronically scanned array radar, blended with electronic-warfare and communications sensors, feeds a sensor-fusion system that merges everything into one integrated picture — cutting pilot workload and enabling first-look, first-shot, first-kill engagements.

02The F-22 Raptor’s stealth: shaped to vanish, armed from within

Stealth is not one trick but many working together. The Raptor’s airframe is shaped so that its edges — wings, tails, bay doors, inlets — are aligned into a few directions, scattering radar energy away from the emitter. Radar-absorbent coatings soak up what shaping cannot deflect. And because bombs and missiles hung under the wings would light up on radar, the F-22 carries everything inside: six AIM-120 AMRAAMs and two AIM-9 Sidewinders in internal bays, opened only for the split second it takes to fire. The penalty is maintenance-hungry coatings and a smaller weapons load than a non-stealthy jet — the price of being nearly invisible.

03The F-22 Raptor’s F119 engines: the muscle behind supercruise

Most fighters need fuel-gulping afterburner to break the sound barrier. The Raptor’s two F119 turbofans produce so much dry thrust that it can hold roughly Mach 1.8 without reheat — extending range, missile reach and time on station while staying efficient and harder to spot on infrared. The same engines drive two-dimensional nozzles that pivot the exhaust up and down, letting the jet point its nose in ways aerodynamics alone forbid. Together they make the F-22 both a sprinter and an acrobat — a rare combination even a generation later.


Technical Data

Full F-22 Raptor specifications

Airframe & Performance

Mürettebat
1
Uzunluk
18.9 m (62 ft 1 in)
Kanat açıklığı
13.6 m (44 ft 6 in)
Yükseklik
5.1 m (16 ft 8 in)
Boş ağırlık
~19,700 kg (43,340 lb)
Max takeoff weight
~38,000 kg (83,500 lb)
Max speed
~Mach 2.25 with afterburner
Supercruise
~Mach 1.8 (no afterburner)
Servis tavanı
Above 50,000 ft (~15 km)
Ferry range
>1,850 mi with 2 external tanks

Propulsion, Armament & Programme

Engines
2 × P&W F119-PW-100, ~35,000 lb class
Nozzles
2-D pitch-axis thrust vectoring
Gun
1 × M61A2 20 mm, 480 rounds
Air-to-air (internal)
6 × AIM-120 + 2 × AIM-9
Air-to-ground (internal)
2 × 1,000-lb GBU-32 JDAM
First flight
7 September 1997 (F-22A)
Number built
195 (~187 operational)
Unit cost
~$143M+ flyaway (see below)
04The F-22 Raptor’s cost: why 195 was all America bought

The Raptor is famously expensive, and the figures depend on how you count. The flyaway cost — the price of one more jet off the line — is commonly cited above $143 million. But spread the programme’s roughly $67 billion in research and procurement across just 195 airframes and the programme-unit cost balloons toward $350 million each. Cite whichever you mean and say so. Either way, the number is why the Air Force’s planned 750 jets became 381, then 195: the F-22 was simply too costly to buy in the quantities first imagined, and the line closed in 2011.


Timeline

The F-22 Raptor: four decades in the making

1981

The requirement is set

The USAF establishes the Advanced Tactical Fighter (ATF) requirement to counter projected Soviet fighters such as the Su-27 and MiG-29.

1986

Fly-off begins

A demonstration/validation phase pits Lockheed’s YF-22 against Northrop’s YF-23.

1990

Prototypes fly

Both the YF-22 and the YF-23 make their first flights.

1991

YF-22 wins

In August the Lockheed-led YF-22 is declared the winner and moves into Engineering & Manufacturing Development.

1997

First F-22A flight

The first production-standard F-22A flies on 7 September.

2005

Initial Operational Capability

The Raptor reaches IOC on 15 December, entering frontline service.

2011–12

Production ends

The line is capped and closed at 195 aircraft; the final airframe is delivered in 2012.

2014

Combat debut

On 22 September the F-22 flies its first combat mission — air-to-ground strikes on ISIS targets over Syria.

2023

First air-to-air kills

In February the Raptor downs a Chinese surveillance balloon and two other high-altitude objects — its first-ever aerial kills.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

From the flight line: twelve F-22 Raptor stories

Origins

YF-22 vs YF-23: the fly-off that chose the future

Two radically different stealth prototypes dueled in 1990–91.

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Northrop’s sleek YF-23 was arguably stealthier and faster; Lockheed’s YF-22 was more agile and, the Air Force judged, lower-risk and more maneuverable. In August 1991 the YF-22 won — and became the Raptor, while the YF-23 became one of aviation’s great “what-ifs” and now sits in museums.
Hız

Supercruise: fast without the fuel bill

The Raptor cruises supersonic without ever lighting the afterburner.

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Most fighters need fuel-gulping afterburner to go supersonic. The Raptor’s F119 engines let it cruise at about Mach 1.8 dry, extending range, missile reach and time on station while staying efficient — a signature fifth-generation trick that few aircraft can match even today.
Maneuver

The thrust-vectoring cobra

Vectoring nozzles let the Raptor point its nose where aerodynamics forbid.

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Two-dimensional vectoring nozzles pivot the engine exhaust up and down, letting the Raptor perform tail slides, high-alpha loops and cobra-like pitch maneuvers that make air-show crowds gasp — and give it a close-in dogfight edge that pure aerodynamics cannot.
Rarity

Only ~187: a fleet too small

The Air Force wanted 750 Raptors and got fewer than 190 usable jets.

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The plan was 750, then 381. Budget pressure and the end of the Cold War slashed the buy to just 195 built. With attrition, fewer than 185 remain in service — every airframe a scarce, guarded national asset that cannot be replaced now the line is closed.
Politics

Banned from export by law

A 1998 U.S. law made it illegal to sell the F-22 to anyone.

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A congressional amendment made it illegal to export the Raptor abroad. Even close allies such as Japan and Australia were refused. The goal was to keep its stealth and sensor secrets exclusively American — a decision still debated as costs and small numbers came home to roost.
Combat

The highest kill in history: the 2023 balloon

A single AIM-9X ended a Chinese spy balloon at over 60,000 feet.

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On 4 February 2023 an F-22 fired one AIM-9X Sidewinder to destroy a Chinese surveillance balloon off South Carolina — the Raptor’s first-ever air-to-air kill and likely the highest-altitude aerial engagement ever recorded.
Follow-up

Three shoot-downs in nine days

Days after the balloon, Raptors downed two more mystery objects.

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After the balloon, F-22s destroyed two more unidentified high-altitude objects — over Yukon, Canada on 11 February and over Lake Huron on 12 February 2023. A fighter built to kill Soviet jets finally opened its scorebook against balloons and mystery objects.
Deterrence

The silent quarterback

In the Middle East the Raptor watched, escorted and deterred more than it fired.

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In Middle East deployments the F-22 rarely fired a shot in anger but “quarterbacked” coalition airspace — using stealth and fused sensors to escort strike packages, track adversaries and deter hostile aircraft from contested skies.
Dominance

The 100-plus-to-nothing exercises

Red Flag data is the root of the Raptor’s “unbeatable” reputation.

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In large-force exercises like Red Flag, Raptor units have posted staggering simulated kill ratios against fourth-generation “aggressors,” repeatedly downing dozens of opponents for no losses — the data behind the type’s reputation as the most dominant air-superiority fighter ever fielded.
Cost

$67 billion and the 2011 line closure

The Raptor’s price made it politically fragile — and finite.

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The programme’s cost — tens of billions in R&D and more than $140M per jet flyaway — made the Raptor a target for budget cutters. In 2009–2011 the Pentagon ended production to fund the cheaper, exportable F-35, closing the only stealth air-superiority line the U.S. had.
Combat debut

Raptors over Syria, 2014

The Raptor’s first shots in anger were bombs, not missiles.

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The F-22’s combat debut on 22 September 2014 was not against fighters but against ISIS ground targets, dropping JDAMs near the Tishrin Dam — an air-superiority thoroughbred pressed into precision-strike work in a counter-insurgency war.
Future

Upgrade, or retire for NGAD?

With production long closed, the Raptor’s twilight is fiercely debated.

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With the line shut, the Air Force is torn: pour money into upgrading the aging Raptor fleet, or retire the oldest jets and pivot to the sixth-generation NGAD program. The debate over the F-22’s twilight is one of the hottest in U.S. air-power planning.

Gallery

The F-22 Raptor in pictures

The Raptors planform-aligned, faceted shape  the geometry that gives its all-aspect stealth.
The Raptor’s planform-aligned, faceted shape — the geometry that gives its all-aspect stealth.Photo: U.S. Air Force · Public domain
An F-22 opens a side weapon bay in flight  all weapons are carried internally to stay stealthy.
An F-22 opens a side weapon bay in flight — all weapons are carried internally to stay stealthy.Photo: Edward I. Fagg, U.S. Navy · Public domain
The belly missile-bay doors open, revealing the AIM-120 AMRAAMs carried inside the airframe.
The belly missile-bay doors open, revealing the AIM-120 AMRAAMs carried inside the airframe.Photo: U.S. Air Force · Public domain
Inside the Raptor: a glass cockpit built around sensor fusion for a single pilot.
Inside the Raptor: a glass cockpit built around sensor fusion for a single pilot.Photo: U.S. Air Force · Public domain
A Pratt  Whitney F119 at full afterburner on the test stand  the engine behind supercruise.
A Pratt & Whitney F119 at full afterburner on the test stand — the engine behind supercruise.Photo: U.S. Air Force / Pratt & Whitney · Public domain
An F-22 Demo Team pass in full afterburner  the maneuverability thrust vectoring unlocks.
An F-22 Demo Team pass in full afterburner — the maneuverability thrust vectoring unlocks.Photo: Rob Shenk · CC BY-SA 2.0

Watch

The F-22 Raptor in motion

A featured F-22 Raptor video — showcasing supercruise, high-alpha and thrust-vectoring maneuvers — is coming soon.


Operations

Where the F-22 Raptor flies


Combat Record

The F-22 Raptor’s combat record

For all its dominance, the F-22 Raptor has never shot down an enemy fighter aircraft. Its combat debut, on 22 September 2014 over Syria, was an air-to-ground strike with GPS-guided JDAMs against ISIS targets near the Tishrin Dam. In deployments it has worked as an aerial “quarterback,” escorting strike packages and deterring adversary aircraft rather than fighting them.

0Enemy fighters shot down
3Air-to-air kills — all February 2023
2014First combat sorties (air-to-ground)

The Raptor’s only air-to-air kills came in February 2023: on 4 February an F-22 downed the Chinese surveillance balloon off South Carolina with a single AIM-9X — likely the highest-altitude air-to-air kill on record — followed by two more high-altitude objects over Canada and Lake Huron. Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the F-22 Raptor

Can I fly in an F-22 Raptor?
No. The F-22 is a frontline U.S. stealth fighter that is export-banned and flown only by the U.S. Air Force — it is not available to civilians anywhere. However, you can fly several genuine military jets today: see the aircraft MiGFlug does offer at migflug.com/flights-prices/.
How fast is the F-22 Raptor?
About Mach 2.25 at altitude with afterburner, and — uniquely — it can supercruise at roughly Mach 1.8 without afterburner, sustaining supersonic speed efficiently.
Is the F-22 really stealthy?
Yes. Its shaping, radar-absorbent materials and internal weapons bays give it a very small radar cross-section, making it extremely hard to detect and track.
Is the F-22 still in service?
Yes — as of 2026 it remains the U.S. Air Force’s frontline air-superiority fighter, though the Air Force is debating upgrades versus retirement as the sixth-generation NGAD is developed.
Why were so few built, and why can’t other countries buy it?
Cold-War-era plans for 750 jets were cut to 195 for cost reasons, and production ended in 2011. A 1998 U.S. law bans all F-22 exports to protect its classified stealth and sensor technology — no ally has ever been allowed to buy one.
Did the F-22 shoot down the Chinese balloon?
Yes. On 4 February 2023 an F-22 destroyed a Chinese surveillance balloon with an AIM-9X missile — its first air-to-air kill — and downed two more high-altitude objects days later.
How many F-22s were built?
195 in total (roughly 8 test aircraft and about 187 operational jets). The production line closed in 2011–2012.
What’s the difference between the F-22 and the F-35?
The F-22 is a twin-engine air-superiority fighter optimized for speed, altitude and dogfighting dominance — and cannot be exported. The F-35 is a single-engine multirole stealth fighter built for strike, sensor-sharing and affordability, and is widely exported to allies.

Sources & Further Reading

Every F-22 Raptor fact, checked