I can share what's known about current costs, but I don’t have live tool access in this turn to pull the very latest figures.
Direct answer
- Modern U.S. aircraft carriers (Ford-class) have procurement costs typically cited around $12–13 billion per ship in recent baselines, with official CRS estimates for CVN-78 (USS Gerald R. Ford) around $12.9–13.3 billion in then-year dollars, and follow-on Ford-class ships projected in the low to mid-$12 billions per hull when accounting for learning curves and multi-ship contracts [sources aggregated from budget documents and industry reporting]. Costs cited for the next ships (CVN-79, CVN-80, CVN-81) generally land in roughly $12–13 billion ranges per ship in contemporary budgeting contexts, though exact figures vary by year and accounting method . Operational and lifecycle costs (including maintenance, crew, fuel, and aircraft) can run several hundred million to multiple billions over the ship’s life, depending on activity levels and force structure .
Context and nuance
- What drives the price: the Ford-class includes new systems (electromagnetic launch, advanced arresting gear, reduced manning, integrated electric propulsion) that push unit costs higher than earlier Nimitz-class ships, while expected long-term savings come from lower operating costs and maintenance per ship over time. This combination is often described as a higher upfront price with potential lifecycle efficiencies, although the total lifecycle cost remains very high .
- Historical examples: earlier reports highlighted cost overruns and adjustments (e.g., temporary caps and later budget recognitions) which can temporarily push per-ship totals above initial caps, especially when testing and required fixes are included .
- For broader context, other carrier programs or historical estimates vary widely by country, design, and year; the U.S. Ford-class figures are among the most frequently cited in public sources .
Would you like:
- A concise table comparing recent carrier cost estimates (Ford-class CVN-78 through CVN-81) with procurement and estimated per-ship ranges, plus notes on what each figure includes?
- A brief explainer that breaks down upfront procurement vs. lifecycle costs and what components (ship, aircraft, weapons, maintenance) typically constitute the largest shares?
- Links to the most current CRS and Navy budget documents for precise figures?