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how many brahmos does india have

India has never officially disclosed how many BrahMos missiles it has, so any number is an estimate rather than a confirmed fact.

What is officially known

  • BrahMos is a joint India–Russia supersonic cruise missile, in service with the Indian Army, Navy and Air Force for land‑attack and anti‑ship roles.
  • Multiple variants exist: land‑based, ship‑launched, submarine‑launched and air‑launched (Su‑30MKI), with extended‑range and next‑generation (BrahMos‑NG) versions under development or induction.

Hints from orders and units

Open sources give minimum clues, not totals:

  • Indian Air Force:
    • Ordered about 200 air‑launched BrahMos missiles around 2012.
* Later planning for another ~200 units and interest in 400 BrahMos‑NG missiles.
  • Indian Navy:
    • Ordered about 200 BrahMos missiles in a major contract signed in 2023.
* Around 20 Indian warships are reported as being armed with vertical‑launched BrahMos systems.
  • Indian Army:
    • By 2018, the Army publicly acknowledged five BrahMos regiments; one open‑source estimate notes that a regiment can have roughly 65 missiles, suggesting a few hundred ground‑launched missiles at minimum.

Together, these numbers show that India clearly has several hundred BrahMos missiles in service, and likely more when backup stocks and newer orders are included , but the exact figure is classified.

What about claims like “14,000 BrahMos”?

  • Some blog posts, Chinese think‑tank commentary and forum discussions have floated figures of 14,000–15,000 BrahMos missiles, often by extrapolating production capacity over many years.
  • Even in those discussions, many defence enthusiasts and analysts warn these numbers are “far‑fetched” and not backed by verifiable data.
  • No Indian official source has confirmed anything close to these very high figures, so they should be treated as speculation, not fact.

In other words, the “14,000 BrahMos” story is more of a debate topic on defence forums than a reliable data point.

Production trend (why the number keeps growing)

  • India has set up new integration and testing facilities, including a major unit in Lucknow designed to produce around 80–100 BrahMos missiles per year, with plans to scale to 100–150 next‑generation variants annually.
  • Defence commentators also mention Indo‑Russian plans to produce around 2,000 BrahMos missiles over ten years, with a portion meant for export, indicating long‑term, large‑scale production but again without a precise breakdown of how many go to Indian stockpiles versus exports.

Simple takeaway

  • Exact official number of BrahMos in Indian service: Not publicly disclosed / classified.
  • Open‑source, minimally confirmed picture: at least several hundred missiles across Army, Navy and Air Force from known contracts and regiments, with ongoing production that will increase this over time.
  • Very large figures like “14,000 BrahMos” are speculative and not supported by official data , though they often circulate in forum and media debates.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.