Israel’s Defense Ministry and industry partners say they are preparing to deliver an initial operational version of the Iron Beam laser air-defense system to the Israel Defense Forces, a milestone that could lower the cost of intercepting short-range rockets, mortars and drones when conditions allow.
As Israel faces continuing threats from rockets, drones and mortar fire, officials and defense analysts say attention is increasingly focused on Iron Beam, a high-energy laser air-defense system designed to complement Israel’s existing interceptor-based network.
Israeli officials have said the first capability is scheduled to be delivered to the Israel Defense Forces on December 30, 2025, an initial operational handover date that has been reported by multiple defense and regional outlets.
Iron Beam was first publicly revealed in 2014 and is being developed by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, the company behind Iron Dome, in partnership with U.S. defense contractor Lockheed Martin. The system is designed to engage short-range rockets, mortar rounds and unmanned aerial vehicles using a directed-energy laser rather than an interceptor missile.
Publicly described configurations of an Iron Beam battery include an air-defense radar, a command-and-control element and two high-energy laser units. Rafael has said the system is intended to integrate into Israel’s layered air-defense architecture alongside Iron Dome, David’s Sling and the Arrow systems.
Advocates of laser air defense argue that its central economic advantage is a low cost per shot compared with interceptor missiles—because it primarily consumes electrical power rather than expending a missile. Some commentary has put the marginal “electricity cost” for a laser engagement at only a few dollars, though precise figures depend on assumptions and are not typically presented as an audited, battlefield-ready cost estimate.
Analysts also caution that directed-energy systems come with operational constraints. Performance can be affected by line-of-sight limitations and atmospheric conditions such as cloud cover, haze or heavy humidity, which can reduce effective range and reliability.
Even with those limits, Israeli and industry statements describing extensive testing—and reporting that the system is moving toward initial operational service—have fueled expectations that Iron Beam could, over time, reduce pressure on interceptor inventories during high-volume attacks, particularly against drones and other short-range threats.