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Leopard 2A6

An evolution of the A5 that replaced the L/44 gun with the longer, harder-hitting L/55 smoothbore for increased muzzle energy. It remains in frontline service with several NATO armies alongside newer A7 tanks.

In service since 2001 · 8 operator countries

Compiled from public sources ·primary reference ↗ ·last verified 2026-07-02

68

km/h

550

km range

18.6

hp/t

120

mm gun

62,300

kg

Procurement snapshot

Availability & export

German export-licensed

BAFA licensing with strict end-use review; approvals can be politically constrained.

Channel: Direct commercial / G2G

Fielded & proven

Established · 8 operators

In service since 2001. Status: active · ~655 built.

Lifecycle cost (est.)

No public unit price to model from.

Interoperability

120 mm NATO smoothbore

Derived guidance from public data — export regime by country of origin, lifecycle from the GAO ~30% acquisition rule. Verify eligibility, pricing and offsets with the manufacturer and your acquisition authority.

Full specifications

Performance

Speed, range, altitude and engagement capability.

Max speed

Maximum level speed. For aircraft this is at optimal altitude; for ground vehicles, top road speed. Higher means faster response and better kinematic performance.

68 km/h
Stronger than 56% of main battle tanks
Range

Maximum distance: ferry range for aircraft, operational range for vehicles, maximum engagement distance for missiles. Higher means more standoff or persistence.

550 km
Stronger than 79% of main battle tanks
Power-to-weight

Engine power per tonne of vehicle weight. Higher means better acceleration and cross-country mobility.

18.6 hp/t
Stronger than 21% of main battle tanks
Muzzle velocity

Projectile speed leaving the barrel. Higher means flatter trajectory and better armor penetration.

1,750 m/s
Stronger than 87% of main battle tanks

Firepower

Armament, payload and guidance.

Main armament

Primary weapon: main gun, cannon or missile type.

120 mm Rheinmetall L/55 smoothbore
Secondary armament

Additional weapons: coaxial MG, remote weapon station, gun pods.

2x 7.62 mm MG3 machine guns
Caliber

Bore diameter of the main gun or rifle. Larger throws heavier projectiles; not simply better — ammunition commonality matters.

120 mm
Ammunition

Rounds carried (main gun) or standard magazine capacity.

42
Stronger than 70% of main battle tanks

Protection

Armor, countermeasures and survivability.

Armor

Armor technology: composite, modular, ERA-fitted, uranium-ceramic. Exact compositions are classified.

Composite armor with arrow-shaped spaced turret appliqué
Reactive armor

Explosive reactive armor (ERA) blocks that disrupt shaped-charge jets.

No
Countermeasures

Self-protection: chaff, flares, DIRCM, towed decoys, smoke dischargers, jammers.

smoke grenade launchers
NBC protection

Sealed crew compartment with overpressure filtration for nuclear/biological/chemical environments.

Yes

Physical

Dimensions, weight and crew.

Length

Overall length including gun/probe where applicable.

10.97 m
Width

Overall width — matters for rail/road transport of vehicles.

3.75 m
Height

Overall height. Lower profile is harder to spot and hit for ground vehicles.

3 m
Combat weight

Fully loaded weight. Lighter eases transport and bridging limits; heavier often means more armor.

62,300 kg
Crew

Personnel required to operate. Fewer reduces exposure; autoloaders trade a loader for mechanical complexity.

4

Propulsion

Engine, power and fuel.

Engine

Powerplant model and type.

MTU MB 873 Ka-501 V12 twin-turbo diesel
Engine power

Engine output power. Higher moves more weight faster.

1,500 hp
Stronger than 85% of main battle tanks
Fuel capacity

Internal fuel volume.

1,200 L
Propulsion type

Turbofan, turboshaft, diesel, gas turbine, solid-fuel rocket, ramjet…

Diesel

Sensors & avionics

Radar, sensor suite and datalinks.

Sensors

IRST, EO/IR turrets, laser designators, sniper pods, thermal sights.

EMES 15 fire control, commander's panoramic sight
Thermal imaging

Thermal sights for night and obscured-visibility operations.

Yes

Program

Cost, production scale and operators.

Units built

Total production run. Higher means proven manufacturing, mature logistics and spares availability.

655
Stronger than 64% of main battle tanks
Operator countries

Number of countries operating the system. More operators means broader support ecosystem.

8
Stronger than 89% of main battle tanks

Specifications compiled from public KNDS and reference sources ↗. Published defense figures are approximations — treat comparisons as directional. Last verified 2026-07-02.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the top speed of the KNDS Leopard 2A6? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 has a maximum speed of 68 km/h.

What is the range of the KNDS Leopard 2A6? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 has a maximum range of 550 km.

How much does the KNDS Leopard 2A6 weigh? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 has a combat weight of 62,300 kg.

How many crew does the KNDS Leopard 2A6 require? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 requires a crew of 4.

What is the main armament of the KNDS Leopard 2A6? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6's primary weapon is the 120 mm Rheinmetall L/55 smoothbore.

What engine does the KNDS Leopard 2A6 use? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 is powered by the MTU MB 873 Ka-501 V12 twin-turbo diesel.

What is the KNDS Leopard 2A6 used for? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 is a main battle tank typically used for anti armor, infantry combat.

How many countries operate the KNDS Leopard 2A6? +

The KNDS Leopard 2A6 is operated by 8 countries.

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