Raytheon launches AMRAAM-ER missile full-rate production

Key Points
  • Raytheon received a $234.8 million contract on April 14 to transition the AMRAAM ER missile into full-rate production in Tucson, Arizona.
  • The Foreign Military Sales award includes Hungary, Kuwait, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, and Taiwan, with $61.6 million obligated at the time of award.

Raytheon is moving its AMRAAM Extended Range missile into full-rate production under a new $234.8 million contract from the Department of War.

The award gives Raytheon Co. of Tucson, Arizona, a not-to-exceed $234,757,000 cost-plus-fixed-fee undefinitized contract action to complete the work needed for the production transition. The contract runs through April 13, 2030, with all work set to take place in Tucson. At the time of award, $61,569,156 in Foreign Military Sales funds was immediately obligated.

Beyond the contract value itself, the key news is that the AMRAAM-ER has now reached the stage where it is being prepared for sustained large-scale output. In defense procurement terms, that means the missile is moving beyond development and limited production work into a stable manufacturing pipeline intended to support long-term orders.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

The customer list attached to the award shows how widely the missile is already being positioned among U.S. partners. The Foreign Military Sales package includes Hungary, Kuwait, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, and Taiwan.

Taiwan’s inclusion stands out given the island’s continuing efforts to strengthen its layered air defense network. The Netherlands and Norway, meanwhile, remain central operators within NATO’s evolving ground-based air defense architecture, making the production transition particularly relevant for European procurement plans.

The AMRAAM-ER is an extended-range version of the well-known Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile family. While the standard AMRAAM is widely used as an air-to-air weapon carried by fighter aircraft, the ER variant has become especially important for ground-based launch systems, most notably NASAMS.

That role has given the missile a higher profile in recent years. NASAMS, developed through the long-running partnership between Raytheon and Norway’s Kongsberg, is now fielded by a growing list of countries and has become one of the most widely recognized Western air defense systems.

The AMRAAM-ER is essentially built to let those ground launchers reach farther. It combines the guidance section of the standard AMRAAM with a larger rocket motor and modified body, allowing it to intercept targets at greater range and higher altitude.

That extra reach is especially valuable for defending cities, military installations, and critical infrastructure against aircraft, cruise missiles, and other airborne threats.

A production schedule that extends to 2030 suggests Raytheon and its customers are planning for sustained procurement over several years rather than a limited short-term buy.

The contract’s core significance is straightforward: a mature missile program tied to NASAMS and multiple allied customers is now entering sustained full-rate production through the end of the decade.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

U.S. Air Force buys more Norwegian-made stealth missile

The U.S. Air Force awarded Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace, the Norwegian company that builds the weapon, $98.4 million to produce the next batch of...

Kongsberg’s profits jumped 50% on missile demand

Norwegian defense and technology group Kongsberg posted a second quarter that outpaced its own recent growth trajectory by a wide margin, with revenue climbing...

Germany’s engine giant bought an armored vehicle maker

Germany's DEUTZ AG, a 160-year-old engine manufacturer better known for building diesel motors than battle tanks, agreed on July 9 to buy FFG Flensburger...

Kongsberg secures $50M for U.S. Marine Corps’ ship-killing missile program

The U.S. Navy awarded Norwegian defense manufacturer Kongsberg Defence and Aerospace a contract modification worth roughly $50.3 million on July 2 to buy more...

RENK expands Rheinmetall deal as Lynx orders keep growing

German engineering firm RENK just locked in more than $308 million in future business keeping one of Europe's newest tracked infantry vehicles actually moving,...