India’s first fifth-generation fighter—the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA)—is not merely a new jet program. It is a national security priority that demands speed, clarity, and execution discipline to protect India’s airpower advantage and strategic deterrence.
AMCA Approved for Private
Acceleration
In a landmark decision, three
private-sector players have been shortlisted to build India’s first
fifth-generation fighter under the AMCA program. The ₹15,000 crore
project will task the selected private partner with producing five
prototypes at a new greenfield facility in Andhra Pradesh.
The Defence Ministry has issued
the Request for Proposal (RFP) to three shortlisted teams:
- Tata Advanced Systems
- L&T–BEL–Dynamatic consortium
- Bharat Forge–BEML–Data Patterns consortium
Importantly, for a major fighter
jet program, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL)—India’s long-time aviation
prime—has been kept out of this particular procurement route for prototype
development. The intent is straightforward: reduce bureaucratic drag,
accelerate access to cutting-edge technologies, and apply modern industrial
best practices—while strengthening India’s broader push for self-reliance in
advanced aerospace.
Why the Timing Cannot Slip
The urgency is driven by
regional airpower trajectories. China already has more than 350 J-20
fifth-generation aircraft and is projected to scale to around 1,500 by 2035.
It is also preparing to export its second fifth-generation platform, the J-35,
and has reportedly tested sixth-generation fighters.
In the same strategic window,
Pakistan’s likely access to fifth-generation capability could rapidly shift the
air combat balance. Pakistan is also constrained by severe economic and
political instability and is effectively influenced by its military
establishment. Even a short timeline advantage in fifth-generation induction
can meaningfully reshape deterrence and operational options—hence the pressure
on India to deliver AMCA faster.
HAL’s Load and the Reality of
Bottlenecks
HAL is already heavily engaged
across multiple major platforms and schedules—such as production of LCA Mk1A,
anticipated growth of LCA Mk2, large-scale helicopter output, and
development activity for trainers that have faced delays in the past.
Because HAL has many parallel
commitments, the AMCA model is designed to ensure the fighter program does not
become another casualty of capacity constraints, competing priorities, or
prolonged production cycles. India’s private sector, meanwhile, has matured in
aero-structures and sub-systems for global programs—demonstrated by
achievements such as the made-in-India Airbus C-295 rollout by Tata Advanced
Systems.
The Proposal Timeline: From
Shortlisting to Prototypes
In mid-2025, the ADA
and DRDO issued an expression of interest for the stealth fighter
project, receiving bids from seven players. After technical evaluation in February,
three private teams were shortlisted.
The government will fully fund
the prototype development phase under the ₹15,000 crore outlay. The
winning partner will work alongside ADA (under DRDO) to build:
- Five flying prototypes
- One structural test aircraft
This work will be conducted at
the new 650-acre facility in Puttaparthi, Andhra Pradesh.
Detailed bids are expected
within two to three months, with the contract award targeted for around January–March
2027. The first prototype flight is expected between 2028 and
2032, with potential entry into service after 2035 and series
production at the Puttaparthi facility.
AMCA: Likely Design and
Mission Roles
The AMCA is expected to be a single-seat,
twin-engine fighter with stealth coatings and internal weapons
bays. It is being designed by ADA for both the Indian Air Force
(IAF) and the Indian Navy.
Its intended mission set
includes:
- Air superiority
- Ground strike
- Suppression of enemy air defences (SEAD)
- Electronic warfare
The AMCA is designed to
eventually supplant the Sukhoi Su-30MKI, which currently anchors a large
share of the IAF’s fighter force. Key design priorities include low radar
cross-section and supercruise capability.
Program Milestones: From
Concept to Prototype Planning
The AMCA program began in 2010,
soon after the IAF issued its Air Staff Qualitative Requirement (ASQR).
Early expectations pegged the first flight around 2017, but the program
has progressed in phased stages, including model display and multiple design
lock-ins.
By Aero India 2015, the
configuration was finalised; in 2016, the design was accepted by the
IAF. More recently, design work completed in 2023 paved the way for
prototype development approval under the ₹15,803 crore project figure,
with plans for five prototypes and staggered developmental and weapons
trials.
Stealth, Sensors, and Cockpit
Concept
The AMCA’s stealth approach is
expected to include features such as:
- a twin-tail layout
- platform edge alignment and serration
- body-conformal antennas
- low-intercept radar shaping
- internal weapons bays
- extensive composite usage (reported around 40%)
For situational awareness and
combat effectiveness, the aircraft is expected to use:
- distributed passive sensors
- AI-assisted multi-sensor data fusion
- integration with an advanced electronic warfare suite
The cockpit concept is expected
to rely on a glass cockpit with panoramic displays and a wide-angle holographic
head-up display, designed to reduce pilot workload through improved
man-machine interaction.
Weapons, Range, and
Performance Targets
The AMCA is expected to carry a
mix of:
- an internal gun (23 mm GSh-23)
- Astra missile variants
- close-combat missiles
- air-to-ground missiles
- weapons including BrahMos NG and other variants
- precision munitions—primarily in stealth-configured
internal bays
- external hardpoints for non-stealth missions
Directed-energy weapon
integration is also expected to be part of the roadmap.
Reported targets include an
operational ceiling of about 65,000 feet, internal weapon load of
roughly 1,500 kg, and external load of around 5,500 kg. Initial
propulsion is likely based on modified GE F414 afterburning turbofans,
with reported maximum speed around Mach 1.8, range around 3,240 km,
and combat range around 1,620 km.
The Private Sector Advantage:
Capacity and Precision
India already has a growing
defence industrial ecosystem. Companies are producing aero-structures, engine
components, UAVs, defence electronics, and subsystems that feed global supply
chains.
Examples include:
- Tata Advanced Systems supporting major helicopter and
supply-chain needs
- Lockheed Martin-linked aero-structures manufacturing through
Indian partnerships
- engine component manufacturing efforts involving GE and the
Tata ecosystem
- defence electronics and sub-system suppliers supporting major
global primes
- aerospace component production scale-up by firms across large
and medium enterprises
The main value of private
participation is not just cost—it is execution discipline, industrial
scaling, and precision manufacturing at specification, which are
critical for stealth airframe and integrated avionics.
The Industry Partnership
Execution Model
The government shifted to an industry
partnership model instead of an earlier structure built around a special
purpose vehicle (SPV). The revised approach aims to reduce delays related to
development funding and export/licensing constraints—particularly around
engine-related permissions.
Under this model:
- the selected partner is responsible for development,
production, and lifetime maintenance
- private or public players can bid as independent entities,
consortia, or joint ventures
This framework was cleared in May
2025, and the shortlist was confirmed after technical evaluation during February
2026, followed by RFP issuance.
Puttaparthi: Building the
Prototype and Test Ecosystem
Andhra Pradesh has been actively
involved in enabling AMCA execution infrastructure. The state cabinet cleared
transfer of land at Puttaparthi Airport to DRDO for the AMCA
project, and ADA teams have assessed the site suitability.
The approach includes:
- systems design, testing, and module assembly at ADA
facilities (Bengaluru)
- transfer of modules for assembly and flight-testing at
Puttaparthi
- creation of a dedicated flight-testing complex, supporting
infrastructure, and streamlined airspace coordination
Planned runway extension, local
flying zone creation, and upgraded ATC and navigation systems are designed to
reduce flight-test friction and speed up prototype trials.
Engine Roadmap: Collaboration
and Indigenous Growth
AMCA’s timelines depend heavily
on propulsion progress. India and France agreed to collaborate on a future
combat aircraft engine roadmap under broader strategic cooperation, while GE
Aerospace and HAL are expected to jointly produce GE F414 engines in
India for near-term variants and initial AMCA requirements.
India’s long-term objective
remains the development of an indigenous fighter engine through the broader National
Aero Engine Mission, including a phased approach involving multiple
prototypes over a decade-long horizon.
AMCA’s Early Success: A
Strategic Imperative
The IAF’s projected requirement
of about seven squadrons makes the stakes clear: operational gaps cannot
wait. The AMCA must remain on a credible induction timeline to preserve
deterrence and battlefield relevance.
India also needs to avoid
splitting national effort across competing major fifth-generation development
streams that could dilute engineering focus, financial bandwidth, and
industrial learning curves. Any interim decisions—if needed—should not
jeopardise AMCA momentum.
Lead Integrator and PMO-Level
Monitoring
For AMCA to succeed quickly,
India must select a major private lead integrator and ensure the
integrator builds the right industrial teaming strategy across subsystems and
supply chains.
Finally, AMCA cannot be treated
as “just another defence program.” It is a national security priority
that requires close oversight at the highest level, including PMO-level
monitoring, to prevent slippage and to ensure decisive execution.
The time to build AMCA was
yesterday—now is the moment to get it right.