The Navy’s F/A-XX Program Downselect Expected In August: The Navy’s long-anticipated F/A-XX sixth-generation fighter program is expected to have an announced builder by August. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Daryl Caudle said on Monday that the Navy will select the builder this summer in a bidding war between Boeing and Northrop Grumman.
“The need for the F/A-XX is unquestionable. Peer competitors and even lesser adversaries are improving their anti-air capabilities,” Caudle said.

F/A-XX Boeing Image.
“I think you’re going to see a downselect on this in August. I think that’s the month that they have committed to making the decision on the program,” Caudle said to the assembled media at the Navy League’s Sea-Air-Space Symposium.
Caudle hinted that one company may already have been eliminated from the competition.
“The Navy’s got a lot of demand… making sure that we don’t, again, fall into a trap of oversubscribing,” Caudle said. “One of the contractors who would make this plane for us is in a place where they really can’t deliver in the timeframe we need it. So there was a ‘check twice, cut once’ kind of mentality here on this decision,” he added.
Boeing was selected last year to build the F-47 NGAD fighter for the Air Force, while Northrop Grumman is building the B-21 Raider bomber for the Air Force. Lockheed Martin was involved in the bidding, but was dropped last year after submitting a bid that didn’t meet the service’s criteria.
Is Northrop Grumman’s Teaser Video The Hint Of Things To Come?
In response to the news, Northrop Grumman released a new teaser video. The company then posted on its “X” account, “We’re bringing tomorrow’s horizon into focus, faster, stronger, and ready when the warfighter needs it.”
We’re bringing tomorrow’s horizon into focus, faster, stronger and ready when the warfighter needs it.#SAS2026 pic.twitter.com/r0uORyR5kM
— Northrop Grumman (@northropgrumman) April 20, 2026
With this news and the Air Force’s F-47 NGAD, announced last spring, along with the B-21 Raider already in production, the US military is firmly moving into sixth-generation military aircraft advances. It is no longer just a future vision for the Pentagon.
It is now a defining force in the US military’s continued air dominance for the next several decades. These aircraft promise unprecedented advances in speed, stealth, and autonomy.
What Does The Latest Teaser Show? YF-23 2.0 Maybe
As with any other computer-generated video or still art piece, no one knows whether it will truly look like the aircraft. But the fun part is that many aviation analysts and enthusiasts get to pick which features are shown.

YF-23 Stealth Fighter. Image taken by Harry J. Kazianis for 19FortyFive.
It should be noted that the rendering of the F/A-XX still looks like a sixth-generation version of Northrop’s YF-23 stealth fighter that lost to the YF-22 Raptor a few decades ago, despite many believing that it bested the Raptor in many aspects of the competition, including speed, stealth, and range.

YF-23A Black Widow II 19FortyFive Image Taken by Harry J. Kazianis.
As the TWZ points out, the F/A-XX has a broad, duck-billed nose with a stealthy chine that extends back into the fuselage. However, the front landing gear is positioned further back, possibly to accommodate a large AESA radar.

YF-23 Stealth Fighter. Image taken by Harry J. Kazianis for 19FortyFive.
The canopy is large, perhaps large enough for a two-seat configuration. The tailless design has rear-set dorsal inlets for the engines. Those are probably different than the actual ones for security purposes.

YF-23 Stealth Fighter. Image taken by Harry J. Kazianis for 19FortyFive.
Why The Navy Needs The F/A-XX In The Indo-Pacific:
With improvements made by adversaries like China, including the development of advanced fighters and long-range missile systems, the US Navy needs a new platform capable of establishing air superiority and surviving in high-threat environments, while protecting the Navy’s biggest power-projection platforms, its aircraft carriers.
The U.S. Navy needs the F/A-XX, a sixth-generation carrier-based fighter, to replace the aging F/A-18 Super Hornets and to ensure air superiority and continued power-projection capabilities in increasingly contested environments, particularly against rivals like China in the Pacific.
China is also advancing its own naval aviation. The introduction of the J-35 stealth carrier fighter, the J-36, sixth-generation bomber, and the KJ-600 airborne early warning aircraft strengthens China’s ability to contest sea and air control.

J-36 Fighter Artist Rendition. X Screenshot.
Key requirements for the F/A-XX include advanced stealth, significantly extended range, and the ability to operate alongside and direct Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) drones, forming a critical component of the Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) family of systems.
This advanced platform is vital for maintaining the effectiveness and survivability of aircraft carrier air wings against emerging threats and ensuring the Navy can project power and influence globally.
The US operates 11 aircraft carriers as well as nine amphibious assault ships (LHDs), which are used to maintain force projection around the globe. But the US carriers might not be able to approach close enough to desired targets without incurring unacceptably large volumes of enemy missile fire.
F/A-XX Would Extend Ranges For Strike and Air Defense Missions:
The F/A-XX is designed with significantly greater range and payload capacity than the Super Hornet, allowing carrier air wings to project power further into contested areas and conduct deep strikes more effectively.
With the F/A-XX, the carriers can perform deep strikes, quarterback combat drones, and engage any Chinese missiles, planes, and drones seeking a long-range kill on U.S. ships and assets.
The aircraft “will be vital to maintaining air superiority and open sea lines of communication for decades to come,” wrote Vice Admiral Dan Cheever, the Navy’s “Air Boss.”
“It is the centerpiece of sixth-generation naval aviation — a stealthy, long-range, data-integrated platform designed to dominate in contested environments. It is built for the fight we know is coming,” said Rep. Jen Kiggans.
The F/A-XX And The Loyal Wingman Program:
The F/A-XX will incorporate key fifth and sixth-generation technologies—stealth radar cross-section minimization, networked sensors, and the capability to simultaneously control four drones, starting with new MQ-25 Stingrays entering service for mid-flight refueling (and likely other roles in time) and future carrier-based Loyal Wingmen drones armed with missiles or radars for combat tasks.

MQ-25 Boeing Drone U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers. Image Credit: Boeing.

The U.S. Navy and Boeing conducted ground testing of the MQ-25 Stingray at Chambers Field onboard Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia. The MQ-25 Stingray is an unmanned aerial refueling aircraft. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sam Jenkins)

MQ-25. Image Credit – Creative Commons.
“[Air wing of the future] ties to our MQ-25 for stealth refueling. It ties to our reach. It ties to the work we’re doing for making the carry or something that remains very effective into the future based on the range in which it can operate safely,” Caudle said to the USNI.
USNI reported that the US Navy has contracted five defense firms—General Atomics, Boeing, Anduril, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin—to develop armed, unmanned aircraft and control systems for deployment across its 11 aircraft carriers.
Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) confirmed the contracts, which aim to produce modular, interoperable Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) to augment F/A-18E/F Super Hornets and F-35Cs, while eventually pairing with the future sixth-generation F/A-XX.
“The CCA concept is all part of our sixth-generation concept. It’s tied with the overall air wing of the future concept,”caudle added.
“It is a program that we’re working very hard trying to do that in learning with the Air Force on what CCAs look like in the future and the way we’re going to command and control those how many, what’s the number that a pilot can reasonably control and task and AI is part of that.”
Lockheed Martin will also lead development of the MD-5 Mission Control System via its Skunk Works MDCX autonomy platform.
The US Navy’s carrier task forces have extensive air defense capabilities. But their short-range F/A-18 Super Hornets are a potential Achilles Heel. The F/A-XX will definitely help extend that range to where the carriers can fight and survive.
The F/A-18 Super Hornets are wearing out faster than the standard F/A-18s, and, in the context of the air campaign against Iran, they are placing even more stress on the aging airframes.

U.S. CENTRAL COMMAND AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY (Dec. 29, 2024) A U.S. Navy Aviation Boatswain’s Mate (Aircraft Handling), left, and a U.S. Navy Aviation Boatswain’s Mate (Equipment) prepare an F/A-18E Super Hornet, attached to Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 81, for launch from the flight deck of the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75) in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility. (Official U.S. Navy photo)
The government is rightly concerned about the simultaneous development of two new projects (F-47 and the F/A-XX), citing budget constraints and production risks.
However, as Isaac Seitz wrote, “The F/A-XX is also designed to be a key node in the Pentagon’s Joint All-Domain Command and Control (JADC2) network.
“It will integrate with space-based assets, undersea platforms, and cyber-resilient systems, enabling multi-domain operations and distributed lethality.
“Its role as a command-and-control hub for unmanned systems and its compatibility with emerging technologies like adaptive propulsion and high-energy lasers position it as a central element of future carrier strike groups.”
About the Author: Steve Balestrieri
Steve Balestrieri is a National Security Columnist. He served as a US Army Special Forces NCO and Warrant Officer. In addition to writing on defense, he covers the NFL for PatsFans.com and is a member of the Pro Football Writers of America (PFWA). His work was regularly featured in many military publications.