Breaking News
Canada’s Future MQ-9B SkyGuardian Fleet to Begin Service in 2028 with Limited Initial Capability.
On April 8, 2026, local news agency Ottawa Citizen, citing unclassified internal documents, reported that Canada’s future MQ-9B drone fleet is still expected to enter service in 2028, but with only a restricted first set of functions.
The update indicates that Ottawa is maintaining the schedule of a major remotely piloted aircraft program while accepting a gradual introduction of capability. That makes the development important not only for the Canadian Armed Forces, but also for wider questions of sovereignty, surveillance, and long-endurance coverage over a vast national territory. It also provides a clearer picture of how Canada intends to build up this strategic asset in phases rather than fielding its full mission profile from the outset.
Canada is set to field its MQ-9B SkyGuardian drone fleet in 2028 with limited ISR capability, marking the start of a phased build-up toward full operational maturity by the early 2030s (Picture Source: General Atomics)
The aircraft acquired by Canada are MQ-9B SkyGuardian remotely piloted aircraft built by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems under the country’s Remotely Piloted Aircraft System program. General Atomics announced in December 2023 that Canada had ordered 11 aircraft together with certified ground control stations and associated support systems, confirming the scale of the future fleet and the broader infrastructure behind it. The platform belongs to the medium-altitude, long-endurance category and is intended to support persistent intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions, giving Canada a new capability for both domestic and overseas operations once the system is fully integrated.
What gives the latest reporting its importance is the fact that the fleet’s entry into service will not immediately unlock its full potential. According to the documents cited in the reporting, the drones will initially perform only “basic domestic ISR” tasks, meaning their first operational use will remain centered on intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions within Canada. They will not be armed at that stage, will not be able to disrupt communications, and will not initially deliver the round-the-clock surveillance coverage that had once been anticipated. In other words, the 2028 milestone is expected to mark the beginning of service, not the completion of the program’s operational build-up.
The reporting also indicates that the first of the 11 aircraft remains on schedule for delivery, while full operational capability is expected only between 2030 and 2033. This suggests that Canada is treating the program as a phased fielding effort requiring the progressive expansion of trained personnel, infrastructure, command arrangements, mission integration, and doctrine. Rather than pointing to a failure of either the platform or the procurement itself, the limited initial capability appears to reflect the complexity of bringing a new strategic unmanned aviation system into service under controlled conditions.
Additional details reported about the program help place that transition in a more concrete operational framework. Program staffing has reportedly risen to more than 290 personnel, above the 240 originally planned, underlining the scale of the institutional effort needed to sustain the fleet. Once fielded, the drones will be designated in Canadian service as the CQ-9B SkyGuardians, with operations tied to Canadian Forces Bases 14 Wing Greenwood in Nova Scotia and 19 Wing Comox in British Columbia, while mission control will be handled from a new operations center in Ottawa. Those details reinforce the idea that Canada is not simply buying aircraft, but constructing an entire operational ecosystem around them.
For Canada, even a limited early ISR capability could still carry operational value. A long-endurance remotely piloted aircraft fleet can improve awareness over remote spaces, maritime approaches, and northern regions where persistence matters as much as speed. The significance of the 2028 entry into service lies less in the immediate availability of every planned function than in the start of a new surveillance architecture that Canada can expand over time. The stronger message from this update is that the real measure of success will not be the arrival of the first airframes alone, but Ottawa’s ability to turn them into a mature, credible, and enduring national capability.