Akinci
Baykar's twin-engine HALE UCAV; Saudi Arabia's parallel deal at SAHA 2026 is Turkey's largest-ever aviation export.
Last refreshed: 21 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Is the Saudi Akıncı deal proof that Gulf states are now choosing Turkish drones over American ones?
Timeline for Akinci
Baykar sells first Kızılelma to Indonesia
Drones: Industry & DefenceWhat is the Bayraktar Akinci and how powerful is it?
How big is Saudi Arabia's Akinci drone deal with Turkey?
What is the difference between Bayraktar TB2, Akinci, and Kızılelma?
Background
The Bayraktar Akıncı (Turkish: 'Raider') is a high-altitude long-endurance unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) manufactured by Baykar, Turkey's leading drone company. At SAHA 2026 in Istanbul on 5 May 2026, Saudi Arabia signed a parallel Akıncı deal described by Turkish authorities as Turkey's biggest-ever aviation export, announced simultaneously with Baykar's landmark first export of the larger Kızılelma to Indonesia. The Saudi deal builds on an earlier framework agreement worth reportedly more than $3 billion that involves local assembly through a joint venture with Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI), targeting 70% local content.
Akıncı is Baykar's largest and most capable platform: TWIN-turboprop engines (450-850 hp each), a 20 m wingspan, 12.2 m length, maximum take-off weight of approximately 6,000 kg, and a payload capacity of 1,500 kg across internal and external stations. Endurance exceeds 24 hours at a service ceiling of around 40,000 ft, placing it in the same performance class as the U.S. MQ-9 Reaper in endurance while carrying a heavier weapons load. Akıncı can carry air-to-air, air-to-ground, and stand-off Cruise Missiles, and has demonstrated tri-mode guidance in recent tests. It is significantly larger and more capable than the Bayraktar TB2, though smaller than the jet-powered Kızılelma.
The Saudi Akıncı deal cements Turkey's position as a credible Tier 2 arms exporter and tests the Gulf's appetite for non-Western defence hardware. Akıncı's relevance extends well beyond the drone beat: Turkey-Saudi defence relations, Gulf procurement strategy, and Middle East air-power balances are all shaped by this export.