Navy Announces New Small Surface Combatant
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Navy announced today its plan to introduce a new class of smaller combatant ships, the FF(X), as a critical component of the Navy’s fleet of the future. The FF(X)
www.navy.milHere’s the latest on the US Navy FF(X) frigate program based on recent open-source reporting up through early 2026.
What FF(X) is intended to be: a smaller, modular, surface-com warfare-focused frigate derived from proven American cutter designs to provide a faster-delivery, lower-cost complement to the fleet, enabling distributed maritime operations. This aligns with the Navy’s goal to relieve pressure on larger destroyers and expand global presence with a more agile platform.
Schedule and development milestones: reports indicate the program aims for an initial hull to be launched by around 2028, with subsequent flights delivering incremental capability. A Critical Design Review was planned for mid-2026 to establish the baseline before construction begins.
Policy and program shifts: after the Constellation-class program faced significant cost/schedule challenges, the Navy moved to establish FF(X) as a more risk-tolerant path, leveraging an established hull concept (Coast Guard cutter family) and a single shipyard for lead construction. This transition was documented in late 2025 and carried into 2026 coverage.
Budget and procurement trajectory: 2026–2027 reporting suggested two initial FF(X) hulls could be funded under a streamlined process, with plans to scale to a broader small surface combatant fleet in subsequent years. The FY2027/FY2028 budget discussions highlighted continued emphasis on rapid delivery and modular payloads to enable quick upgrades.
Public and industry perspective: coverage from defense press and industry outlets frames FF(X) as a pragmatic solution to fill gaps left by Constellation-class delays, emphasizing modularity, payload versatility, and mixed mission roles from surface warfare to counter-UAS and sea-lane security.
If you’d like, I can pull up the most recent official Navy statements or summarize differences between Flight I and Flight II concepts, and I can also create a brief timeline visual to illustrate milestones and decision points.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Navy announced today its plan to introduce a new class of smaller combatant ships, the FF(X), as a critical component of the Navy’s fleet of the future. The FF(X)
www.navy.milThe U.S. Navy plans a new FF(X) frigate based on a proven American cutter design to accelerate President Trump’s Golden Fleet.
www.armyrecognition.comThe Navy is leveraging the Legend class National Security Cutter to plug the gap left by axing the Constellation class frigate.
www.twz.comUS Navy FY2027 budget funds first FFX frigate based on NSC hull with modular weapons and 22 ship plan for small surface combatant fleet expansion
www.armyrecognition.comThe first hull is expected to hit the water in 2028 as a more nimble companion to the Navy’s larger warships, Navy Secretary John Phelan said.
www.militarytimes.comWASHINGTON, D.C. – The Navy announced today its plan to introduce a new class of smaller combatant ships, the FF(X), as a critical component of the Navy’s fleet of the future. The FF(X) will be a
www.navsea.navy.milAfter killing the Constellation-class frigate program, the Navy announced plans to build a replacement “FF(X) frigate” based on a Coast Guard cutter.
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