This is a list of equipment of the Swedish Army currently in use. It includes current equipment such as small arms, combat vehicles, explosives, missile systems, engineering vehicles, logistical vehicles, artillery, air defence and transport vehicles.
Pansarterrängbil 300, Finnish produced Patria XA-300 6x6. 20 vehicles ordered and delivered in 2023. 321 ordered in March 2024, to be fitted with Protector RWS.[16][17][18]
Terrängbil 24, Finnish made 4x4 MRAP, commercially known as Sisu GTP.10 mobile short-range radar systems consisting of the Giraffe 1X radar mounted on the Sisu GTP ordered in August 2024.[22]
Initial order for 400 vehicles, as part of a framework agreement that covers the possible acquisition of up to 3,000 vehicles.
Variants:[25]
Troop Transport
Medical 1
Medical 2
Communication Army
Communication Home Guard
Communication Air Defence
Repair Shelter
Cooled Shelter
Shelter
Flatbed
Dog Transport
VAN Logistic
Flaklastbil 1 ton (Ford Ranger)
Pick up / Flatbed truck
-
The vehicles are built on Ford Ranger model pickups. Four-wheel drive with high/low gear, six-speed automatic transmission and an engine power of 170 horsepower. This delivery of flatbed trucks from FMV to the Swedish National Guard (Hemvärnet) is the first in a series of deliveries around the country that will be completed in 2025. Pick up till hemvärnet
Artilleristystem 08, a Truck-mounted 155 mm gun-howitzer built using the older FH77 in their production. The Archer entered service in February 2016.[45]
24 ordered in 2009
24 ordered in 2016 (this batch was initially intended for Norway)
The Swedish government announced on 16 March 2023 that among the 48 received, 24 were in service, 24 were in storage, 14 Archer would be sold to the British Army in March 2023, and 8 transferred to the Ukrainian Ground Forces.[46]
Swedish 120 mm double-barrel mortar version of the CV90. Additional 20 ordered in 2022 to be delivered 2023–2024. 20 further units ordered in 2023 bringing the total fleet to 80 vehicles, planned to be in service by 2025.[48]
12 cm granatkastare m/41, a Swedish-produced version of the Finnish Tampella 120 Krh/40. Earliest 12 cm grk m/41 were imported from Finland. Several in storage.
Artillerilokaliseringsradar 2091, commercially known as ARTHUR, which stands for Artillery Hunting Radar. Swedish counter-battery radar mounted either on Bv 208 or a transport container. Can track up to 100 projectiles a minute, of which 8 projectiles simultaneously.[50]
Luftvärnssystem 103 Patriot. 4 units (total 12 launchers). 100 MIM-104E PAC-2 GEM-T Missiles to be delivered (range >160 km) 200 PAC-3 MSE Anti ballistic missiles to be delivered.[55]
Standard issue pistol of all branches. Pistol 88, Glock 17 Gen 1. Pistol 88B, Glock 19 Gen 2. Pistol 88C, Glock 17 Gen 2. Pistol 88C2, Glock 17 Gen 3. Pistol 88D Glock 19 Gen 2.
15,000 M4A1 purchased directly from US Army stocks in 2024 to act as interim service weapons while awaiting full delivery of the new Automatkarbin 24.[60]
Standard issue assault rifle, based on the Belgian FN FNC. Ak 5 C is the carbine variant, Ak 5 D is a shortened variant for crews and CQB, and Ak 5 D Mk II is Ak 5 D upgraded to the same standard as current Ak 5 C. Ak 5 A and Ak 5 B variants have been retired. Can be equipped with a M203 grenade launcher.
120 000 units ordered 2024 replacing the M90 helmet.
Footnotes
^120 units were acquired in 1994 and 10 were donated to Ukraine in 2023.[1][2] 44 will start to be upgraded to the Strv 123A by 2026.[3]
^Total number of CV9040 IFV variants originally acquired for the Swedish Army is 355, at least one modified to an EW vehicle and at least 50 donated to Ukraine.[7] UN Register of Conventional Arms 2023 report lists 224 active.[8]
^Total number of acquired Bv 206 and Bv 208 vehicles since 1974 is 4500.[29]
^Total number is 70 launchers, with hundreds in storage.[12]