F-16 Fighting Falcon — Specifications, Variants & Analysis | usFighterJets.com
4th Generation Multirole 4,600+ Built 25+ Nations Single Engine Still in Production

F-16
Fighting Falcon

General Dynamics / Lockheed Martin · United States Air Force & 25+ Nations · Service Entry 1978

Max Speed
Mach 2.0
Combat Radius
575 nm
T/W Ratio
1.10
Nations
25+
Built
4,600+

F-16 Fighting Falcon Overview

The General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon — unofficially nicknamed the Viper by its pilots — is a single-engine, highly agile multirole fighter aircraft and the most widely operated jet fighter in the world. With over 4,600 aircraft built and operators spanning 25+ nations across five continents, the F-16 is arguably the most influential fighter aircraft programme of the late twentieth century.

The F-16 entered service with the USAF in 1978 as a lightweight, affordable complement to the heavier F-15 Eagle under the High-Low mix concept. What began as a pure dogfighter evolved through successive upgrades into a highly capable multirole platform capable of precision ground attack, suppression of enemy air defences, anti-ship strikes, and nuclear weapons delivery — all while retaining the agility that made it legendary in air-to-air combat.

Remarkably, the F-16 remains in full production today as the Block 70/72 — the most technologically advanced version ever built — with new customers continuing to order the aircraft more than 50 years after its first flight in 1974.

4,600+
Aircraft Built
25+
Operator Nations
50+
Years in Production
76+
Air-to-Air Kills
F-16 Fighting Falcon in flight showing cranked delta wing
F-16 Fighting Falcon — Lockheed Martin · USAF & Multi-Nation

F-16 Fighting Falcon Specifications

Specifications refer to the F-16C Block 50/52 unless otherwise stated. Performance varies between blocks — the F-16 Block 70/72 features more capable avionics but similar performance figures.

Performance — F-16C Block 50/52
Maximum Speed
Mach 2.0
~1,320 mph / 2,124 km/h at altitude
Low-Level Speed
Mach 1.2
at sea level — heat limit
Service Ceiling
50,000 ft
approx. 15,240 m
Combat Radius
575 nm
hi-lo-hi mission profile
Ferry Range
2,280 nm
with 3 external fuel tanks
T/W Ratio
1.10
clean configuration
G Limit
+9.0 g
structural limit
Service Entry
1978
388th TFW, Hill AFB
Propulsion
Engine — F-16C Block 50
General Electric F110-GE-129
augmented turbofan — 29,500 lbf with afterburner
Engine — F-16C Block 52
Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-229
augmented turbofan — 29,100 lbf with afterburner
Thrust (AB)
29,500 lbf
GE F110-GE-129
Thrust (dry)
17,155 lbf
military power
T/W Ratio
1.10
best in class for single-engine
Engines
Single
unique single-engine high-performance config.
Weights & Dimensions
Empty Weight
18,900 lb
8,573 kg
MTOW
42,300 lb
19,187 kg
Internal Fuel
7,000 lb
3,175 kg
Max Payload
17,000 lb
7,711 kg external stores
Length
49 ft 5 in
15.06 m
Wingspan
32 ft 8 in
9.96 m
Height
16 ft 0 in
4.88 m
Wing Area
300 ft²
27.87 m²
Avionics & Armament
Radar — Block 50/52
AN/APG-68(V)9
Northrop Grumman — mechanically scanned pulse-Doppler, look-down/shoot-down capable
Radar — Block 70/72
AN/APG-83 AESA
Northrop Grumman SABR — scalable agile beam radar, based on F-22 APG-77 technology
Air-to-Air Missiles
AIM-120 AMRAAM + AIM-9X Sidewinder
BVR and short-range IR-guided missiles
Air-to-Ground
JDAM, JSOW, Maverick, HARM, Paveway
Full precision strike capability — laser-guided, GPS-guided, anti-radiation
Gun
M61A1 Vulcan
20mm, 511 rounds
Hardpoints
11 stations
2× wingtip + 6× wing + 3× fuselage

F-16 Block Variants Explained

Unlike aircraft variants that represent fundamentally different airframes, F-16 Blocks represent successive capability upgrades applied to essentially the same base design. Each Block introduced new avionics, engines, or structural improvements. Understanding the Block system is key to understanding the F-16's 50-year evolution.

Block 1/5/10

Initial Production — Air Defence Focus

1978 – 1980 · F-16A/B

First production F-16As with AN/APG-66 pulse-Doppler radar and limited air-to-ground capability. Established the F-16's reputation for exceptional agility. Fly-by-wire controls and reclined seat introduced for G-tolerance.

Block 25/30/32

Multirole Upgrade — AN/APG-68 Radar

1984 – 1989 · F-16C/D introduced

Introduction of the F-16C/D with the more capable AN/APG-68 radar enabling medium-range AIM-7 Sparrow missile employment. Block 30/32 introduced the choice of GE F110 or P&W F100 engines — the "alternate fighter engine" competition that drove cost down through competition.

Block 40/42

Night Attack Capability — LANTIRN

1989 – 1996 · Night Falcon

Integration of the LANTIRN targeting and navigation pod system enabling precision night attack with laser-guided bombs. Block 40/42 aircraft became the primary precision strike platform of the Gulf War, flying 13,500+ sorties in Operation Desert Storm.

Block 50/52

SEAD / Wild Weasel — Definitive Cold War Standard

1991 – Present · Current USAF Standard

Most capable production F-16 for the USAF. Introduced the powerful GE F110-GE-129 (Block 50) or P&W F100-PW-229 (Block 52) engines, the AN/APG-68(V)9 radar, and the Harm Targeting System for suppression of enemy air defences. The Block 50/52 became the definitive multirole standard.

Block 70/72

Most Advanced F-16 Ever Built — Current Production

2021 – Present · Export Customers

The pinnacle of the F-16 design. Features the AN/APG-83 AESA radar (derived from F-22 technology), a modern large-area cockpit display replacing analogue instruments, an Automatic Ground Collision Avoidance System (Auto-GCAS), conformal fuel tanks, and advanced electronic warfare. Being delivered to Bahrain, Slovakia, Bulgaria, and others.

F-16 Fighting Falcon Design & Technology

Fly-By-Wire & Relaxed Static Stability

The F-16 was the first production fighter aircraft to use a digital fly-by-wire flight control system. Rather than mechanical linkages between the pilot's controls and control surfaces, the F-16 uses computers to interpret pilot inputs and actuate the surfaces electronically. This enabled the designers to make the aircraft inherently aerodynamically unstable — a configuration that dramatically improves agility at the cost of being impossible to fly manually.

The F-16's relaxed static stability means the aircraft is constantly trying to depart controlled flight. The flight control computers make thousands of corrections per second to prevent this, translating the aircraft's natural instability into extraordinary responsiveness to pilot inputs. An F-16 reacts to control inputs approximately four times faster than a conventionally stable aircraft.

Reclined Seat & G-Suit Integration

To help pilots withstand the F-16's exceptional sustained g-force capability, the ejection seat is reclined at 30 degrees rather than the conventional near-vertical position used in most fighters. This reduces the effective weight of the pilot's head during high-g manoeuvres, delaying the onset of g-induced loss of consciousness (GLOC). The F-16 can sustain 9g continuously in combat — enough to cause GLOC in an unprotected pilot within seconds.

Bubble Canopy

The F-16's large one-piece blown-acrylic bubble canopy provides 360-degree visibility — the pilot can see directly behind and below the aircraft without any structural obstructions. This field of view was unprecedented in a production fighter aircraft at the time of the F-16's introduction and remains one of the best in service. The canopy is also a structural element of the airframe, contributing to fuselage stiffness.

Side-Stick Controller

Rather than the conventional centre stick used in most fighters, the F-16 uses a side-stick controller mounted to the right of the pilot. The stick is essentially immovable — it responds to force inputs rather than movement, a configuration known as an isometric controller. This design works in concert with the reclined seat and the fly-by-wire system to enable precise control inputs at high g-loading when the pilot's arm weighs several times its normal weight.

F-16 Fighting Falcon History & Combat Record

Lightweight Fighter Programme Origins

The F-16 emerged from the USAF's Lightweight Fighter (LWF) competition of the early 1970s — itself a product of the "Fighter Mafia," a group of reform-minded Pentagon analysts including John Boyd and Pierre Sprey who argued that increasingly complex and expensive fighters were defeating themselves by becoming too sophisticated to build in sufficient numbers.

General Dynamics' YF-16 competed against Northrop's YF-17 in fly-off trials in 1974. The YF-16 won on the basis of superior energy maneuverability — a concept developed by John Boyd — demonstrating decisively better sustained turn performance, acceleration, and climb rate. The USAF selected the YF-16 for full-scale development in January 1975.

Operation Desert Storm — 13,500 Sorties

The F-16's most significant combat deployment to date was Operation Desert Storm (1991), in which USAF F-16s flew approximately 13,500 sorties — more than any other aircraft type in the coalition. F-16s conducted precision strikes on Iraqi airfields, command facilities, bridges, and logistics infrastructure using laser-guided bombs. Despite flying in one of the most heavily defended airspace environments since Vietnam, F-16 losses were relatively limited.

Israeli Air Force Combat Record

The Israeli Air Force (IAF) has accumulated the most extensive combat record of any F-16 operator. IAF F-16s have been used in some of the most strategically significant air strikes in modern history, including the 1981 strike on Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor (Operation Opera), the 2007 strike on Syria's Al-Kibar nuclear facility, and sustained operations against Iranian-backed forces in Syria. IAF F-16s have achieved numerous air-to-air kills against Syrian aircraft, contributing the majority of the F-16's overall confirmed air-to-air kill tally.

Ukraine Operations

In 2024, the Netherlands and Denmark began delivering F-16s to Ukraine as part of international military aid. Ukrainian pilots trained in Western Europe before flying combat missions against Russian forces — marking the F-16's first combat deployment in Eastern Europe and its first engagement with peer-level adversary air defence systems. The F-16's integration of modern precision weapons and SEAD capability made it particularly valuable for Ukrainian strike operations.

F-16 Fighting Falcon Operators — 25+ Nations

The F-16 is operated by more nations than any other modern fighter aircraft, spanning NATO members, Middle Eastern allies, Asian partners, and South American air forces.

United States
F-16C/D Block 40/50/52
~800+ operational
Israel
F-16A/B/C/D / F-16I Sufa
~200 operational
Turkey
F-16C/D Block 30/40/50
~240 operational
South Korea
F-16C/D Block 32/52
~170 operational
Netherlands
F-16AM/BM (transitioning)
Transitioning to F-35A
Pakistan
F-16A/B/C/D Block 52+
~75 operational
Greece
F-16C/D Block 52+ Viper
~84 operational
Poland
F-16C/D Block 52+
~48 operational
Romania
F-16A/B MLU
~17 operational
Ukraine
F-16A/B MLU
Deliveries from 2024
Bahrain
F-16 Block 70
16 on order
Slovakia
F-16 Block 70
14 on order

F-16 Fighting Falcon vs F-15 Eagle

The F-16 and F-15 were both products of the post-Vietnam reform era and were deliberately designed as a high-low complementary pair. Understanding their differences explains the strategic logic behind the USAF's acquisition of both aircraft simultaneously.

F-16 Fighting Falcon vs F-15C Eagle — Key Performance
F-16C Fighting Falcon
F-15C Eagle
Max Speed
Mach 2.0
Mach 2.5+
T/W Ratio
1.10
1.07
Combat Range
575 nm
1,062 nm
Max Payload
17,000 lb
23,000 lb
Unit Cost
~$32M
~$65M
Units Built
4,600+
1,198

The F-15 wins on speed, range, and payload — making it the superior dedicated air superiority platform for long-range engagements. The F-16 wins on cost, production numbers, agility, and thrust-to-weight ratio — making it the superior affordable multirole aircraft for export and high-volume procurement. The USAF deliberately paired them: F-15s for high-end air superiority, F-16s for everything else.

F-16 Fighting Falcon FAQ

What is the top speed of the F-16 Fighting Falcon?+
The F-16 Fighting Falcon has a maximum speed of Mach 2.0 — approximately 1,320 mph (2,124 km/h) — at altitude with afterburner. At low altitude the maximum speed is approximately Mach 1.2 due to aerodynamic heating limits on the airframe. Both the F-16C and F-16D variants share the same top speed.
How many F-16 Fighting Falcons have been built?+
More than 4,600 F-16 Fighting Falcons have been built since production began in 1974, making it the most produced Western fighter aircraft of the modern era. Production continues today with the F-16 Block 70/72 being manufactured at Lockheed Martin's Greenville, South Carolina facility for export customers including Bahrain, Slovakia, and Bulgaria.
How many countries operate the F-16 Fighting Falcon?+
Approximately 25 nations currently operate the F-16 Fighting Falcon — more than any other modern fighter aircraft. Major operators include the USA, Israel, Turkey, South Korea, Greece, Poland, Pakistan, Netherlands, Romania, and Ukraine. The F-16's affordability and proven capability have made it the default export fighter for US foreign military sales programmes.
Why is the F-16 called the Viper?+
F-16 pilots unofficially call their aircraft the "Viper" — a nickname derived from the Viper spacecraft from the TV series Battlestar Galactica, which the F-16's design resembled. The official name "Fighting Falcon" was less popular with pilots. The Viper nickname has been used so widely and for so long that it is now semi-officially recognised, particularly in the context of the Block 70/72 upgrade which is sometimes marketed as the "F-16V Viper."
Is the F-16 still in production?+
Yes. The F-16 remains in active production as the Block 70/72 — the most advanced version ever built — with Lockheed Martin delivering aircraft to Bahrain, Slovakia, Bulgaria, and other customers. The F-16 has been in continuous production since 1974, making it one of the longest-running fighter aircraft production programmes in aviation history.
Has the F-16 seen combat?+
Yes — extensively. The F-16 has one of the most diverse combat records of any fighter aircraft, seeing action in Operation Desert Storm (1991, 13,500+ sorties), Operation Allied Force over Yugoslavia (1999), Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, Operation Iraqi Freedom, operations against ISIS in Syria and Iraq, Israeli strikes on Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, Pakistani operations on the Afghan border, and most recently Ukrainian combat operations from 2024 onwards.