The UH-60 Black Hawk is in service with 35 countries as of 2024.
Australia S-70A-9 Australia bought early model UH-60 in the 1980s, and is buying a fleet of newer variants ones in the 2020s:
Australia ordered fourteen S-70A-9 Black Hawks in 1986 and an additional twenty-five Black Hawks in 1987. The first US-produced Black Hawk was delivered in 1987 to the
Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). The Black Hawks saw operational service in
Cambodia,
Papua New Guinea,
Indonesia,
East Timor and
Pakistan. In April 2009, the then-
defence chief Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, told the
government not to deploy Black Hawks to
Afghanistan as at the time they "lacked armor and self-defense systems", and despite an upgrade to address this underway, it was more practical to use allies' helicopters. In 2004, the government selected the Multi-Role Helicopter (MRH-90) Taipan, a variant of the
NHIndustries NH90, to replace the Black Hawk even though the
Department of Defence had recommended the S‐70M Black Hawk. In January 2014, the Army began retiring the fleet of 34 Black Hawks from service (five had been lost in accidents) and had planned for this to be completed by June 2018. The
Chief of Army delayed the retirement of 20 Black Hawks until 2021 to enable the Army to develop a
special operations role capable MRH-90. On 10 December 2021, the S-70A-9 Black Hawks were retired from service. On the same day, amid issues with the performance of the MRH-90s the government announced that they would be replaced by UH-60M Black Hawks. In January 2023, the Army announced the acquisition of 40 UH-60Ms with deliveries commencing in 2023.
Brazil Brazil received four UH-60L helicopters in 1997, for the
Brazilian Army peacekeeping forces. It received six UH-60Ls configured for special forces, and search and rescue uses in 2008. It ordered ten more UH-60Ls in 2009; deliveries began in March 2011. In July 2024, the MoD authorized the purchase of 12 additional UH-60Ms, in a
US$451 million plan.
Canada In January 2025, the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) chartered 2 UH-60A Black Hawks from an Ottawa-based company for a cost of 5.3 million CA$ (3.7 million US$) The helicopters were acquired for surveillance and rapid response along the Canada-US border, as well as to support the
RCMP Emergency Response Team. The move has been criticized by some as unnecessary and "border security theatre." While designated as civil variants of the S-70 for export purposes, they are operated by the
People's Liberation Army Aviation units.
Colombia UH-60 Black Hawk in November 2010 Colombia first received UH-60s from the U.S. in 1987. The
Colombian National Police,
Colombian Aerospace Force, and
Colombian Army use UH-60s to transport troops and supplies to places which are difficult to access by land for counter-insurgency (COIN) operations against drug and guerrilla organizations, for search and rescue, and for medical evacuation. Colombia also operates a militarized gunship variant of the UH-60, with stub wings, locally known as
Arpía (). The Colombian Army became the first worldwide operator of the S-70i with Terrain Awareness and Warning Capability (HTAWS) after taking delivery of the first two units on 13 August 2013.
Israel The
Israeli Air Force (IAF) received 10 surplus UH-60A Black Hawks from the U.S. in August 1994. Named
Yanshuf () by the IAF, the UH-60A began replacing
Bell 212 utility helicopters. In July and August 2009, the
Federal Police used UH-60s in attacks on drug traffickers. In August 2011, the Mexican Navy received three upgraded and navalized UH-60M. On 21 April 2014, the U.S. State Department approved the sale of 18 UH-60Ms to Mexico pending approval from Congress. In September 2014, Sikorsky received a $203.6 million (~$ in ) firm-fixed-price contract modification for the 18 UH-60s designated for the Mexican Air Force.
Philippines 2 S-70-A5 VIP helicopters purchased 1983 and was delivered in 1984, this Blackhawk served the 250th PAW for more than 3 decades as a Presidential VVIP transport helicopter. Only 1 remains in service with the 505th Search and Rescue Group. In March 2019, the Philippines'
Department of National Defense (DND) signed a contract worth US$241.4 million (~$ in ) with
Lockheed Martin's Polish subsidiary
PZL Mielec for 16 Sikorsky S-70i Black Hawks to the PAF. On 10 December 2020, the PAF commissioned their first batch of six S-70i Blackhawks, with the remaining 10 to be delivered in 2021. In June 2021, the air service received a second batch of five helicopters. In November 2021, the third batch of five arrived. On 22 February 2022, DND and PZL Mielec formally signed the US$624 million contract for 32 additional S-70i Black Hawks, totaling to around 48 units ordered. This will make the
Philippine Air Force the largest user of S-70i Blackhawk Helicopters globally.
Poland In January 2019,
Poland ordered four S-70i Black Hawks with four delivered to the
Polish Special Forces in December of that same year. Another four S-70i helicopters are on order with two scheduled for delivery in 2023 and two in 2024.
Slovakia In February 2015, the U.S. State Department approved a possible Foreign Military Sale of nine UH-60Ms with associated equipment and support to
Slovakia and sent it to Congress for its approval. In April 2015, Slovakia's government approved the procurement of nine UH-60Ms along with training and support. In September 2015, Slovakia ordered four UH-60Ms. The first two UH-60Ms were delivered in June 2017; the
Slovak Air Force had received all nine UH-60Ms by January 2020. These are to replace its old Soviet
Mil Mi-17s. In 2020, the Slovak minister of defense announced Slovakia's interest in buying two more UH-60Ms. Slovak Training Academy (European Air Services / Heli Company) from
Košice, a private company, operates some older UH-60As & Bs for pilot training, aerial fire fighting and sky crane operations.
Sweden Sweden requested 15 UH-60M helicopters by Foreign Military Sale in September 2010. The UH-60Ms were ordered in May 2011, and deliveries began in January 2012. In March 2013, Swedish ISAF forces began using Black Hawks in Afghanistan for MEDEVAC purposes. The UH-60Ms have been fully operational since 2017. Sweden designates it the Helicopter 16 (Hkp 16). In June 2024, Sweden ordered 12 more UH-60Ms from the US.
South Korea The Republic of Korea Armed Forces is also an operator and has produced about 130 aircraft under license from
Korean Air since the 1990s and domestically producing and introducing the UH-60 simulator. However, the cockpit is analog compared to the digital one in the United States, but since this business started after the 1988 Olympics, there was no such thing as a glass cockpit with an LCD monitor. Currently, the majority of South Korea's UH-60s belong to the Army, including 36 units operated by the Special Operations Aviation Corps.
Taiwan Taiwan (Republic of China) operated S-70C-1/1A after the Republic of China Air Force received ten S-70C-1A and four S-70C-1 Bluehawk helicopters in June 1986 for Search and Rescue. Four more S-70C-6s were received in April 1998. The ROC Navy received the first of ten S-70C(M)-1s in July 1990. 11 S-70C(M)-2s were received beginning April 2000. In January 2010, the US announced approval for a Foreign Military Sale of 60 UH-60Ms to Taiwan with 30 designated for the Army, 15 for the
National Airborne Service Corps (including the one that crashed off Orchid Island in 2018) and 15 for the Air Force Rescue Group (including the one that crashed 2 January 2020).
Turkey Turkey has operated the UH-60 during NATO deployments to Afghanistan and the Balkans. The UH-60 has also been used in counter-terror/internal security operations. The Black Hawk competed against the
AgustaWestland AW149 in the Turkish General Use Helicopter Tender, to order up to 115 helicopters and produce many of them indigenously, with
Turkish Aerospace Industries responsible for final integration and assembly. On 21 April 2011, Turkey announced the selection of Sikorsky's T-70. In the course of the
coup d'état attempt in Turkey on 15 July 2016, eight Turkish military personnel of various ranks landed in
Greece's northeastern city of
Alexandroupolis on board a Black Hawk helicopter and
claimed political
asylum in Greece. The helicopter was returned to Turkey shortly thereafter.
Ukraine In February 2023, Ukraine's
Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) published a video showing them operating at least two UH-60s painted in Ukrainian colors. The helicopters appeared to have minimal modifications, namely the addition of two
M240 7.62 mm machine guns for defensive purposes. On 17 March 2024, Russia claimed to have shot down a UH-60 during the
March 2024 western Russia incursion, claiming it was a "troop transport" carrying 20 troops into combat. However, it was revealed to be a
Mil Mi-8 instead.
United States , 1993 The UH-60 entered service with the
U.S. Army's
101st Combat Aviation Brigade of the
101st Airborne Division in June 1979. The U.S. military first used the UH-60 in combat during the
invasion of Grenada in 1983, and again in the
invasion of Panama in 1989. During the
Gulf War in 1991, the UH-60 participated in the largest air assault mission in U.S. Army history with over 300 helicopters involved. Two UH-60s (89-26214 and 78–23015) were shot down, both on 27 February 1991, while performing Combat Search and Rescue of other downed aircrews, an F-16C pilot and the crew of a MEDEVAC UH-1H that were shot down earlier that day. In 1993, Black Hawks featured prominently in the
Battle of Mogadishu in Somalia during which two Black Hawk helicopters were shot down. Black Hawks also saw action in the
Balkans and
Haiti in the 1990s. One such MH-60 helicopter crash-landed during the operation and was destroyed by the team before it departed in the other MH-60 and a backup
MH-47 Chinook with bin Laden's remains. Two MH-47s were used for the mission to refuel the two MH-60s and as backups. News media reported that the Pakistani government granted the Chinese military access to the wreckage of the crashed 'stealth' UH-60 variant in Abbottabad; Pakistan and China denied the reports,
Bell and a joint Sikorsky-
Boeing team both entered competing designs. In December 2022, it was announced that the winning design was Bell's
tilt-rotor V-280 Valor, with the US Army awarding an initial contract to develop a prototype by 2025. This award does not guarantee the eventual adoption of the V-280, which would require further contracts. It had received 20 UH-60Ls by November 2010. Bahrain ordered nine UH-60Ms in 2007. i of the
Royal Brunei Air Force (RBAirF / TUDB).|alt= In December 2011, the
Royal Brunei Air Force (RBAirF / TUDB) ordered twelve S-70i helicopters, which are similar to the UH-60M; four aircraft had been received by December 2013. In June 2012, the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress that Qatar requested the purchase of twelve UH-60Ms, engines, and associated equipment. The Royal Brunei Air Force had earlier bought four UH-60, but these were later sold to Malaysia. In May 2014,
Croatian Defence Minister Ante Kotromanović announced the beginning of negotiations for the purchase of 15 used Black Hawks. In October 2018, the US via Ambassador Robert Kohorst announced donation of two UH-60M helicopters with associated equipment and crew training to Croatia's Ministry of Defence, to be delivered in 2020. In October 2019, the US State Dept approved the sale of two new UH-60M Black Hawks. In February 2022, the first two helicopters were delivered to Croatia. In January 2024, the State Department approved a possible Foreign Military Sale to Croatia for 8 UH-60M helicopters and related equipment and services for an estimated cost of $500 million. The U.S. government has provided $139.4 million in financial assistance for 51 percent of the funding, as a compensation for the Croatian donation of 14
Mi-8 helicopters to Ukraine. The remaining sum is be provided by Croatia's
Ministry of Defence in the three-year budget period from 2025 to 2027. The Letter of Offer and Acceptance was signed in March 2024. Delivery of all 8 Black Hawks is expected in 2028.
Tunisia requested 12 armed UH-60M helicopters in July 2014 through Foreign Military Sale. In August 2014, the U.S. ambassador stated that the U.S. "will soon make available" the UH-60Ms to Tunisia. The sale of 8 helicopters was approved and helicopters were delivered 2017 and 2018. In January 2015, the Malaysian
Defence Minister Hishammuddin Hussein confirmed that
Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) is receiving S-70A Black Hawks from the Brunei government. These helicopters, believed to be four in total, were expected to be transferred to Malaysia by September with M134D
miniguns added. The four Black Hawks were delivered to
Royal Brunei Air Force (RBAirF / TUDB) in 1999. In November 2018, Latvia ordered four UH-60Ms, and received the first two in December 2022. In 2019,
Lithuania announced plans to buy six UH-60M helicopters before ordering four UH-60Ms in 2020. In July 2020, the US
State Department approved the possible Foreign Military Sale of six UH-60Ms and associated equipment to Lithuania for $380 million. In November 2020, Lithuania signed a contract worth $213 million for four UH-60Ms with an option to purchase two more aircraft. Preparations are almost complete including facilities and training, with deliveries expected in late 2024. In 2019, Poland ordered four S-70i helicopters for its
special forces. As of 2023 there is negotiations to purchase additional S-70i helicopters. In August 2023, the
Portuguese Air Force shared a photo on Twitter of the first flight of one of the six UH-60s purchased from Arista Aviation Services. The Portuguese armed forces conducted its first operation flight of its UH-60 in December 2023. In December 2023, the
Hellenic Army selected the UH-60Ms for a possible order of 35 aircraft and associated equipment for an estimated cost of $1.95 billion pending the deal clears Congress. This order was approved by US and Greek governments, and a contract for 35 helicopters agreed by April 2024. In Greek service it will replace aged
Bell UH-1H and
Agusta-Bell AB205.
Future and potential users In February 2013, the
Indonesian Army announced its interest in buying UH-60 Black Hawks to modernize its weaponry. The army wants them for combating terrorism,
transnational crime, and insurgency to secure the
archipelago. In August 2023,
Indonesian Aerospace and Lockheed Martin signed an agreement for the procurement of 24 UH-60/S-70 Black Hawks. In February 2024, it was announced during Singapore Airshow 2024 that Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Indonesia downsized the Black Hawks program to 22 aircraft. In 2022, the
Royal Air Force and
British Army expects to select a helicopter for the
New Medium Helicopter program to replace several existing helicopters. Sikorsky has indicated it expects its
S-70M to meet the requirement to participate in this procurement selection program. In December 2025, the
Directorate General of Defence Purchase floated a tender for UH-60L for the
Bangladesh Army. ==Variants==