Current operators ; :
Israeli Ground Forces – Under the name "Lahav" , mounted on a
HEMTT chassis (picture), in service since 2020. ; :
Azerbaijani Land Forces – 6 Lynx and 50
EXTRA missiles were acquired and then used in the
2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War. ; :
Royal Danish Army – 8 PULS delivered (contract signed on 2 March 2023) for US$133 million. The PULS is based on a
Tatra T815 6×6. All the launchers and missiles were handed over by the end first quarter of 2024. In November 2024, Danish media reported that an officer serving in the Danish army claimed that rocket systems did not have military GPS and were therefore vulnerable to electronic countermeasures. This caused a political debate in Denmark. ELBIT Systems denied the claim. ; :
Royal Netherlands Army – 20 PULS on order on chassis with armoured cabins. Contract worth US$305 million was signed on 18 May 2023, four vehicles to be delivered in 2023. : The first
TATRA truck based PULS launcher was delivered in February 2024. The rest will be built locally on armoured
Scania Gryphus 8×8 trucks in 2025 and 2026. ; :
Kazakh Ground Forces – 18 Lynx and 50 EXTRA rockets ordered in 2007, delivered in 2008–09. The
Naiza is a derivative of the Lynx developed in collaboration, based on the
KamAZ-6350 8×8 chassis. ; :
Rwandan Army – 5 Lynx ordered in 2007, in service since 2008. The contract will be performed over a period of 3.5 years. The first PULS launcher was shown on military parade in 2025.
Unknown customers • Elbit Systems announced on 18 July 2023 that it was awarded a $150 million contract to supply PULS rocket launchers and a package of precision-guided long-range rockets to an international customer. The contract will be performed over a period of three years.
Future operators ; :
Hellenic Army – The Hellenic Army will acquire 36 systems of the European version,
EURO PULS MLRS, in a deal of €650 ($750) million, signed in April 2026, with the construction of some of the components in Greece. The plan includes the acquisition of
Accular,
EXTRA, and primarily
Predator Hawk rockets. The deal will also include
SkyStriker UAV/
loitering munitions, according to media reports from January 2025. The launchers will most-likely be vehicle-mounted on
Iveco trucks, similar to the ones Germany used for the system. It will also integrate the RM-70 rockets already in service with the Hellenic Army. The delivery will make Greece the largest foreign operator of the system. ; :
German Army – The German government decided to buy five PULS systems in collaboration with the Netherlands to replace the five
MARS II (M270 MLRS) sent to Ukraine. The purchase was approved by the parliament in December 2024. It is likely to be installed on an armoured
Iveco Trakker FSA 8×8 (
GTF ZLK 15t). ; :
Indian Army –
Suryastra multi calibre rocket launcher system was ordered in January 2026 at a cost of from NIBE Limited. Ammunition include rockets with a maximum range of 150 km and 300 km and
loitering munitions with 100 km range. To be manufactured in India under
technology transfer. ; :
Peruvian army - Selected in July 2025 to modernize Peruvian army's artilley capabilities in a deal that includes technology transfer and local production.
Potential operators ; : According to the 2032+ reconstruction plan, Austria is planning to procure modern rocket artillery for the
Austrian Armed Forces. Due to the political tensions with the USA in Europe, it is assumed that no US system will be purchased. ; : The Bulgarian Ministry of Defence has decided to forgo the
M142 HIMARS due to its increased price and heavy demand and instead proceed with the PULS as the replacement for the
OTR-21 Tochka. ; :
Philippine Army – Actively competing against the American
HIMARS and South Korean
K239 Chunmoo systems for the MLRS Acquisition Project. ; :
Royal Thai Army – The RTA is testing a localized version of the PULS.
Cancelled ; :
Spanish Army – 16 PULS systems ordered in October 2023 for the (
"Sistema Lanzador de Alta Movilidad") program for approximately €576.5 million. Contract cancelled in September 2025 due to the
Gaza war. ==See also==