Quantcast

Eurofighter Typhoon faces obsolescence amid rise of fifth-generation stealth fighters

European air traffic warning means summer delays for holidaymakers
The EU rule change that could affect millions of Brits when their flight is delayed or cancelled
Delta Earnings Land Soon. Why They’re Key for Airline Stocks and the Economy.
Avelo Airlines to Operate Deportation Flights, Hiring Flight Attendants
Travel chaos 2025: all the strikes and disruption expected across Europe
United receives FAA approval for first Starlink-equipped planes
Qantas launches mammoth Asia flight sale including Bali and Japan
New Update from Air Canada, WestJet, American Airlines, Delta, United, Southwest, Alaska, JetBlue Airways, and Sunwing: Airline Capacity Between Canada and US Slashed as Bookings Plummet Seventy Per Cent
Delta Cuts Two Domestic Routes
United Airlines Technicians Reject ‘Dead on Arrival’ Contract Proposal, Teamsters Say
The State of the Asia Pacific Airline Industry
Spirit Airlines to add Detroit nonstop flight out of Bradley International Airport
Major airline to launch new direct flights from Scotland to North America
Ryanair launches new ‘prime’ membership which saves passengers more than £400 a year
Judge Orders Boeing to Trial on 737 MAX Case
Qantas’ free international Wi-Fi to switch on from next week
The real reason Southwest is charging for bags now
Air France-KLM in ongoing talks with Air Europa on potential stake, CEO says
Frontier Savagely Shades Southwest After They Eliminated Longstanding Free Bag Policy, Sparking Backlash
Frontier Wants You to 'Divorce Your Old Airline' After Southwest Changes
Delta named one of Fast Company's Most Innovative Companies for sustainability initiatives
Passengers escape fiery American Airlines jet in Denver
Delta, American Dive On Slashed Outlooks; But Two Airlines Rally
Competitors are circling Southwest after the airline announced it's going to start charging for checked bags
Exclusive: Dominican Low-Cost Carrier Arajet Wants to Disrupt NYC Market
Boeing deliveries rise 63% in February from a year earlier
Transportation Secretary Duffy Lays Out 10 Ways the FAA Is Working to Upgrade Air Traffic Control and Make Flying Safer
EasyJet pilot Paul Elsworth suspended after flying too close to mountain
Delta Air Lines bets on ‘blended-wing’ flight to reduce emissions
Europe's airlines pivot to bite size M&A deals to limit cost, regulatory burden
Eurofighter Typhoon faces obsolescence amid rise of fifth-generation stealth fighters
Policy
Webp whi
Sean Duffy U.S. Secretary of Transportation | U.S. Federal Aviation Administration

The Eurofighter Typhoon, long considered a leading multirole combat aircraft in Europe, is increasingly seen as outdated due to the rise of stealth technology in modern air warfare. Analysts and some operators now view the Typhoon as less capable against advanced threats, with its future role likely limited to supporting missions rather than front-line engagements.

The design of the Typhoon features canard-delta shaping, exposed engine faces, and external pylons that increase its radar visibility. Attempts to add stealth features would compromise its speed and maneuverability—core advantages for which it was originally designed. "Its primary advantages are speed and maneuverability, so changing its aerodynamics and adding systems would compromise those, leaving no realistic way to 'stealthify' the jet and produce a worthwhile platform," according to analysis.

Unlike fifth-generation fighters such as the F-35, J-20, or Su-57, which reduce their radar cross-section (RCS) using radar absorbent material (RAM), serpentine intakes, and internal weapon bays, the Typhoon lacks these attributes. As a result, it must operate at standoff distances and carry larger missiles that further increase its RCS.

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

In confrontations with modern surface-to-air missile systems like China’s HQ-9B or Russia’s S-400, traditional tactics based on speed and altitude are less effective. The improvement in missile accuracy and range means that stealth is now considered essential for survival against sophisticated air defenses.

The Typhoon was designed during the Cold War era for high-speed dogfighting within visual range rather than deep penetration into enemy territory or all-aspect stealth. This legacy has made retrofitting it with modern low-observable technologies prohibitively complex. "Engineers opted for a delta canard layout...Unfortunately, it makes stealth shaping nearly impossible without a complete redesign."

Modern integrated air defense systems use networked sensors to detect incoming aircraft from hundreds of kilometers away. Covering an existing Typhoon airframe with RAM paint would only provide minimal benefit without more significant changes such as reshaping intakes or shielding engine faces—modifications deemed unfeasible given current design constraints.

Upgrading the Typhoon’s onboard electronics also poses challenges due to size and weight limitations. Fifth-generation jets rely on extensive processing power for sensor fusion—a capability difficult to replicate in the smaller Typhoon platform without degrading performance.

Some maintain that superior kinematic performance could offset the lack of stealth; however, recent advances in long-range missile technology make evasion much harder. Missiles like the AIM-260 or PL-15 can outmaneuver crewed fighters by pulling higher G-forces than pilots can withstand.

From an electronic warfare perspective, the Typhoon’s large signature requires greater jamming power to mask itself compared to stealthier platforms. This increases vulnerability by emitting stronger signals detectable by passive sensors and anti-radiation weapons.

The Royal Air Force recently retired early Tranche 1 models instead of transferring them to Ukraine—a decision reflecting how performance alone is no longer sufficient in today’s combat environment.

Given these realities, European countries are investing in new fighter programs such as Tempest and Future Combat Air System (FCAS) rather than trying to retrofit existing Eurofighters with full-stealth capabilities.

Still, upgrades continue: newer Tranche 5 jets feature enhanced radars (ECRS), advanced countermeasures like DASS (Defensive Aids Sub-System), passive infrared sensors (PIRATE), modular hardware/software updates, improved electronic warfare features, conformal fuel tanks, SPEAR-3 standoff missiles, and more. These improvements aim to keep the Typhoon relevant through the 2040s as a “fourth-generation plus” fighter capable of supporting roles such as missile truck operations or defensive counter-air missions outside heavily defended zones.

"The Eurofighter Typhoon remains a highly capable fourth-generation jet...It can provide a high-value capability even on the fifth-gen battlefield," notes one summary assessment. While not able to compete directly with true stealth fighters in contested environments dominated by networked sensors and advanced SAMs, it will remain operational as part of a broader mix of European airpower until next-generation solutions become fully available.

Organizations Included in this History
More News

Delta Air Lines will introduce new in-flight menu options created by celebrity chef José Andrés starting November 4.

Oct 25, 2025

The Blue Sky partnership between United Airlines and JetBlue launched today, allowing members of both airlines’ loyalty programs to earn and redeem points across the two carriers.

Oct 25, 2025

Air Canada is set to expand its presence at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport (YTZ) by introducing four new nonstop routes to the United States in 2026.

Oct 25, 2025

United Airlines has announced it will add 10 new destinations from its Chicago O'Hare International Airport hub starting next year.

Oct 25, 2025

The partnership between United Airlines and JetBlue, known as Blue Sky, has officially launched.

Oct 25, 2025

American Airlines will introduce its new Airbus A321XLR aircraft on December 18, marking the first time a U.S. airline operates this model.

Oct 25, 2025