In January 2019, the
United States Army began the
Next Generation Squad Weapon Program to find replacements for the
M4 carbine and
M249 Squad Automatic Weapon. In September 2019, SIG Sauer submitted its designs. The
SIG MCX-SPEAR (the rifle's commercial designation) chambered in
.277 Fury (later designated as the "6.8 Common Cartridge" after Army acceptance) in response to concerns that improvements in
body armor would diminish the effectiveness of calibers such as
5.56×45mm NATO (for the M4A1 and M249 SAW) and
7.62×51mm NATO (for the M240). , 2024 In April 2022, the Army awarded a ten-year contract to SIG Sauer to produce the M7 rifle, and the
M250 light machine gun, to replace the M4 carbine and M249 Squad Automatic Weapon, respectively. The rifle was originally designated as the XM5, continuing the numerical sequence from the M4 carbine it is set to replace. In January 2023, the Army changed the name of the rifle from the XM5 to the XM7, to avoid a trademark conflict with
Colt's M5 carbine. The first batch of 25 XM7 rifles and 15 XM250 light machine guns were planned for delivery in late 2023. The Army may order 107,000
rifles and 13,000
light machine guns over the next decade for close combat forces, including infantry, cavalry scouts, combat engineers, forward observers, and combat medics. There are no current plans to issue the XM7 and XM250 to non-close combat soldiers. The contract does have the option to build additional XM7 rifles and XM250 light machine guns should the
U.S. Marine Corps and
U.S. Special Operations Command choose to be included in the adoption. Operational testing of the XM7 rifle, XM250 light machine gun, and XM157 Fire Control Optic was scheduled to begin in 2024, In March 2024, 1st Battalion,
506th Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division began fielding the XM7. In May 2025, the XM7 was type classified as the M7 rifle. The Type Classification confirms the system meets the U.S. Army's stringent standards for operational performance, safety, and sustainment. In September 2025, SIG Sauer introduced an improved carbine variant of the M7 rifle. The U.S. Army decided to proceed with the procurement of the M7 carbine design in December 2025, designating it as the XM8 carbine. ==Design details==