Brazil’s Air Force Says It Needs Almost Twice the Gripen Jets It Bought
Defense
Key Facts
—The gap. Brazil’s air force says it needs at least 66 Gripen jets but has ordered only 36.
—The disclosure. The shortfall was set out in a formal reply to a congressional defense committee.
—The cost. The current 36-jet order is worth roughly $5bn, including weapons and support.
—The maker. The jet is built by Sweden’s Saab with Brazil’s Embraer, with 15 assembled at Gavião Peixoto.
—The timeline. Ten jets have been delivered so far, with the full order not due until 2032.
Brazil’s air force has just admitted, in writing, that it does not have enough fighter jets. In a formal reply to Congress, it said it needs at least sixty-six Brazil Gripen aircraft for national defense, nearly double the thirty-six it has actually ordered.

The disclosure landed at the start of July, in an official letter to the lower house’s foreign-affairs and defense committee. It turns a long-running military grumble into a documented gap between ambition and budget.
What the Brazil Gripen shortfall means
The arithmetic is stark. The force considers a fleet of sixty-six jets adequate for a country of continental size, yet the signed contract covers only thirty-six aircraft.
The air force was blunt about the reason. It pointed to efforts to raise the defense budget as vital to sustaining the armed forces’ strategic projects and the country’s defense industry.
There is a clear intent to buy more. The command stated that it plans to acquire additional batches of the jet, though no new contract has yet been signed to close the gap.
The letter also addressed readiness worries. The force denied it was cannibalizing older aircraft for spare parts, insisting Saab has been meeting its supply commitments on time.
Availability is still a concern. At one air base, six of ten jets were listed as unavailable, though the force said only one was grounded for want of a part.
A jet built partly in Brazil
The Gripen is not just an import. It is made by Sweden’s Saab in partnership with Brazil’s Embraer, with fifteen of the aircraft assembled at Embraer’s plant in Gavião Peixoto in São Paulo state.
That industrial angle raises the stakes. Every extra jet ordered means more high-skilled work and technology transfer inside Brazil, tying a defense decision directly to the country’s aerospace ambitions.
The current deal is already large. The thirty-six-jet order is worth roughly five billion dollars, a figure that covers the aircraft along with weapons and initial logistical support.
In round terms the bill is about $5bn, priced in Swedish crowns. Expanding to sixty-six jets would push the total far higher, at a time when the defense budget is already stretched thin.
The jet itself is highly capable. The F-39, as Brazil designates it, is a modern single-engine fighter with an open software system that allows upgrades over its service life.
Delays, budgets and hard choices
Delivery has been slow. Only ten of the jets have arrived so far, and the full order is not now expected to be complete until 2032, years later than first planned.
Money is the binding constraint. Repeated budget shortfalls have forced a string of contract amendments, stretching out the timetable and keeping older jets in service far longer than intended.
The ageing fleet is the hidden cost. While the country waits, its air force leans on decades-old fighters, a stopgap that carries its own maintenance bills and safety risks.
The decision is ultimately political. Whether Brazil ever reaches sixty-six jets depends less on the generals than on the government that holds power when the money must be committed.
There is a Swedish tilt to the choice too. Brazil has deepened its defense partnership with Sweden in recent months, a relationship that favors expanding the Gripen fleet over switching to a rival aircraft.
The likely path is a phased buy. Analysts expect any expansion to come in stages, perhaps a small top-up followed by a larger government-to-government deal with Stockholm.
For a foreign observer, it is a telling signal. A rising regional power is openly stating that its air defense is under-resourced, and pinning the fix on a budget fight in Brasília.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many Brazil Gripen jets does the air force want?
Brazil’s air force says it needs at least sixty-six Gripen fighter jets for national defense, but the signed contract covers only thirty-six. The command has stated it intends to buy additional batches, though no new deal has yet been finalized.
Who makes the Brazil Gripen and how much does it cost?
The jet is built by Sweden’s Saab with Brazil’s Embraer, with fifteen of the aircraft assembled at Gavião Peixoto in São Paulo state. The current 36-jet order is worth roughly five billion dollars, including weapons and initial support.
Why does the Brazil Gripen gap matter?
It shows a rising regional power openly declaring its air defense under-resourced, with the fix hinging on Brazil’s defense budget. More orders would also mean more work and technology for Embraer and the local aerospace industry.
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