Industrial and military sources across Asia report a significant ramp-up in production for China’s J-35A stealth fighter. Also known as the FC-31 for export, this medium-category aircraft is entering a high-rate production phase, mirroring the manufacturing model of the American F-35 program. Beijing’s explicit ambition is to carve out a credible share of the global stealth fighter market with a politically less restrictive and more financially accessible alternative.
An Industry Serving a Strategy of Influence
The increased production rate is more than an industrial milestone; it is a pillar of a national strategy to bolster technological autonomy and capture defense market share. Where the FC-31 program began tentatively, the J-35A now enjoys clear state backing. The experience with the J-20 fighter taught a crucial lesson: a combat aircraft’s value lies not only in its performance but also in the capacity for mass production and long-term fleet support.
Information available in early 2026 points to an annual production rate of several dozen aircraft, with a medium-term target of 40 to 50 units per year. While this falls short of the peak 150 F-35s produced annually by the U.S., it is sufficient to establish a formidable presence. The J-35A is slated to equip Chinese forces and fuel an aggressive commercial strategy. Its target customers are nations excluded from the F-35 program for political or budgetary reasons, or those seeking to reduce dependence on U.S. military hardware.
An Aircraft Designed to Seduce Intermediate Markets
The J-35A is an evolution of the initial FC-31 demonstrator into a fully operational platform. Observers note a redesigned airframe, reduced radar signature, internal weapon bays, and modernized avionics. Its advertised price undercuts the F-35, with a comprehensive package—including aircraft, training, armaments, and support—costing between $4 and $6 billion for a medium-sized fleet. China is targeting Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, regions where it has already established diplomatic and industrial footholds.
Each sale is accompanied by an extensive package: pilot training, maintenance, and sometimes technology transfers. The objective is clear: to establish long-term logistical dependency. The fighter jet becomes a tool for projecting influence. Even if the J-35A does not claim to match the F-35’s technological sophistication, it occupies a strategic niche. Beijing is no longer merely seeking to catch up; it aims to impose its own model on the global defense market.

