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Friday 26 September 2025

Sweden’s defence budget to rise by 18% next year

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Sweden’s defence budget to rise by 18% next year
A soldier in the Swedish Armed Forces. (Shutterstock.com)

If approved, Sweden will spend 2.8% of GDP on defence next year.

 

Sweden’s government has proposed to increase defence spending by 18% next year, totalling SEK175 billion (USD18.4 billion).

Representing an increase of SEK26.6 billion compared with the previous year, the 2026 budget – now with the Riksdag (Sweden’s Parliament) for approval – will be the “most extensive reinforcement of defence since the Cold War”, the Swedish government announced on 15 September.

If approved, Sweden’s defence spending will reach 2.8% of GDP in 2026 and 3.1% by 2028, putting it on track to meet NATO’s target of 3.5% by 2035.

For equipment purchases specifically, spending will rise by SEK12 billion next year, with acquisitions prioritising the following:

  • Army: air defence, rocket artillery, ammunition, and combat vehicles.
  • Navy: surface combatants and combat boats.
  • Air Force: tactical transport aviation and a “long-range combat capability” (this refers to Sweden’s future fighter aircraft concept, which Saab is leading).  

Notably on ‘combat vehicles’, Sweden issued a request for information in July for new infantry fighting vehicles ahead of a future procurement programme. The effort aims to complement and eventually replace the military’s tracked armoured Combat Vehicle 90s (CV90s) from BAE Systems Hägglunds, some of which have been in-service since the 1990s.

The budget also notably states that it will lease up to four Archer self-propelled howitzers to Latvia and allow the country to purchase 18 new systems.

An “additional SEK50 million”, meanwhile, will be allocated next year to finance a “strengthened equipment development programme”, although it is unclear what the budget is referring to.

Alongside equipment purchases, the government is prioritising investment in research and advanced technology, with a new defence innovation unit set up to support this.

Additional funds may also be provided next year through a ‘2026 Spring Amendment Budget’, enabling quick acquisitions or “when the opportunity arises to bring acquisitions forward”, as was the case this year.

Author Details
Olivia Savage Editor in Chief Clarion Defence & Security
Olivia Savage is the Editor in Chief of Clarion Defence & Security, organisers of DSEI and other defence events. Previously, she was a Senior Defence Journalist at Janes, specialising in electronic warfare, uncrewed systems, and space. 

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