
The U.S. Air Force is spending $2 billion to build a new home for its most advanced stealth bomber — and the first thing it needed was an $81 million wash rack.
Story Snapshot
- Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota is the first official home for the B-21 Raider stealth bomber, with the first aircraft set to arrive in 2027.
- The Air Force plans to spend roughly $2 billion on new facilities at Ellsworth to support the B-21 program.
- Congress approved $4.5 billion to expand B-21 production, and the Air Force wants a fleet of at least 100 aircraft.
- Each B-21 is estimated to cost around $700 million, but the actual per-aircraft cost is classified — raising real questions about the program’s true price tag.
America’s Next Stealth Bomber Gets a New Address
Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota is officially the first home for the B-21 Raider. The Air Force named Ellsworth as the first main operating base and training hub for the new bomber back in 2021. The first B-21 is on track to arrive there in 2027. Once it does, Ellsworth will serve as the center of operations for what the Air Force calls the backbone of its future long-range strike force.
To get ready, the Air Force is investing roughly $2 billion in new facilities at the base. The first completed project is an $81 million wash rack — a specialized structure used to clean and maintain stealth aircraft. It sounds like a lot for a car wash, but stealth coatings require careful, controlled maintenance. Two of these next-generation bombers have already been spotted undergoing testing at Ellsworth, a sign that the base is moving quickly toward full operational status.
Big Money, Big Ambitions — and Big Questions
The numbers behind the B-21 program are staggering. Northrop Grumman has invested more than $5 billion in the digital and manufacturing systems needed to build the aircraft. Congress separately approved $4.5 billion to expand production capacity. The Air Force wants a minimum of 100 aircraft in the fleet. Some estimates put the total program cost — development, purchase, and operations over 30 years — at more than $200 billion.
The per-aircraft cost is officially listed at $550 million in 2010 dollars, $639 million in 2019 dollars, and $692 million in 2022 dollars. Adjusted for inflation, analysts put the real figure closer to $700–$750 million per plane. The actual current cost is classified, so taxpayers cannot independently confirm what they are paying. That kind of secrecy may be necessary for national security — but it also makes it impossible to verify official claims that the program is tracking well on budget.
Progress Is Real, But Transparency Is Limited
The B-21 program has hit genuine milestones. The first flight took place in November 2023. A second test aircraft completed its first flight in late 2024. The program received its third low-rate production contract in the fourth quarter of 2025. Northrop Grumman says test results are exceeding what computer models predicted. In February 2025, the Air Force and Northrop signed a deal to boost annual production by 25 percent.
The US is taking the B-21 Raider program to a new level
The US Air Force has officially moved to the stage of preparing for the deployment of the new strategic B-21 bomber Raider at Ellsworth Air Base.
Ellsworth Air Base is being transformed into a full-fledged operational hub… pic.twitter.com/zHv3mjCLlL
— S p r i n t e r (@SprinterPress) July 6, 2026
Still, history gives reason for caution. The B-21 was originally expected to enter service “in the mid-2020s.” That date has since slipped to 2027. Major defense programs — the F-35 and B-2 Spirit among them — routinely run over budget and behind schedule, even when officials say otherwise. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has documented average cost overruns of 15–25 percent on next-generation weapons programs. With the B-21’s actual costs classified and key schedule comparisons unavailable to the public, Americans are being asked to trust the same contractors and officials who have a direct financial and political interest in making the program look like a success. That’s not a reason to oppose the B-21 — it’s a reason to demand better oversight.
Sources:
realcleardefense.com, stratcom.mil, facebook.com, youtube.com














