; •
Argentine Air Force operated 25 Lorraine-Dietrich 12Eb powered aircraft. ; •
Belgian Air Force bought six Br.19 B2s in 1924, and further 146 A2s and B2s were manufactured in under licence by the
SABCA works in 1926–30. They were powered with
Lorraine-Dietrich 12Eb and
Hispano-Suiza 12Ha engines, and used until the late 1930s. ; •
Bolivian Air Force bought ten aircraft and used them during the
Chaco war against
Paraguay. ; •
Brazilian Air Force operated five aircraft. ; •
Manchurian warlord
Zhang Zuolin is claimed to have ordered 70 Breguet 19s, but these were not delivered. Similarly, an order for four Br.19s from the central government was not met. Manchuria did acquire a single Br.19A2 in 1926 and a Br.19.GR in 1929. ; •
Zrakoplovstvo Nezavisne Države Hrvatske seized 46 aircraft used for
anti-partizan missions. ; • The
French Armys
Aéronautique Militaire operated its first Breguet 19s in the A2 variant from the autumn of 1924, the B2 variant from June 1926, then the fighter C2 and CN2 variants. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, they were the most numerous French combat aircraft. In metropolitan France, they were withdrawn from service in the early 1930s; the last Br.19 CN2 was withdrawn in 1935. Until 1938, they were still used by the
French Air Force (successor to the
Aéronautique Militaire) in colonies in the
Middle East and North
Africa - among others, they were used there to suppress native rebellions. •
French Navy ; •
Hellenic Air Force acquired 30 Breguet 19 A2s and some were used against
invading Italian forces in 1940, delivering valuable information on Italian movements. ; •
Regia Aeronautica bought one aircraft for tests. ; In April 1925, the factory Nakajima Hikoki KK acquired two aircraft. The purchase was the work of the well-known promoter of aviation, the Asahi Shinbun newspaper group. A production license was acquired. Nakajima offered a float-equipped version to the navy, and another was entered into a competition for maritime reconnaissance but was unsuccessful. One plane flew again with wheeled undercarriage and civilian designation J-BBFO as a mail plane. ;
Iran •
Iranian Air Force operated two aircraft. ; •
Polish Air Force bought 250 Breguet 19 A2s and B2s, with Lorraine-Dietrich 12Eb engines, in 1925–30. 20 aircraft were reportedly the longer-range reconnaissance variant, but details are not known. the first Br.19 entered Polish service in 1926, but most were delivered in 1929–30. They were withdrawn from combat units in 1932–37, and used in training units until 1939. They were not used in combat during the
Invasion of Poland of 1939 and most were destroyed on the ground. ; •
Royal Romanian Air Force bought 50 Breguet 19 A2s and B2s in 1927, then 108 Br.19 B2s, and five Br.19.7's in 1930. They were in service until 1938. ; •
Soviet Air Force bought one aircraft for tests. ;
Kingdom of Spain &
Spanish Republic •
Aeronáutica Militar bought a prototype and a license in 1923, and started production in the
CASA| works, in A2 and B2 variants. The first 19 aircraft were imported, the next 26 completed from French parts, then 177 were manufactured (50 of them had Hispano-Suiza engine, the rest the Lorraine-Dietrich 12Eb engine). The Breguet 19 was the basic equipment of Spanish bomber and reconnaissance units until the initial period of the
Spanish Civil War. In July 1936, there were less than hundred in service in the
Spanish Republican Air Force. They were actively used as bombers during the war, especially on the government's side. In 1936, the Nationalists bought an additional twenty from Poland through the
SEPEWE syndicate. With an advent of more modern fighters, the Br.19 suffered many losses, and after 1937 were withdrawn from frontline service. The Republican side lost 28 aircraft, and Nationalists lost 10 (including 2 Republican and 1 Nationalist aircraft, that deserted). The remaining aircraft were used for training until 1940. holding a bomb before the bombardment mission over Dersim with her Breguet 19. ; •
Turkish Air Force bought 20 Br.19 B2s, then 50 Br.19.7s in 1932. Some of these aircraft were used in bombardment and reconnaissance missions during the
Dersim Rebellion. ; •
Royal Air Force bought one aircraft for tests. ; •
Uruguayan Air Force ; •
Venezuelan Air Force operated 12 aircraft. ; •
Yugoslav Royal Air Force bought 100 Br.19 A2s in 1924, and in 1927 acquired a license to manufacture them in a new factory in
Kraljevo. The first batch of 85 aircraft were assembled from French parts, and a further 215 were built from scratch. The first 150 aircraft in Yugoslavian service had Lorraine-Dietrich engines, the next 150 –
Hispano-Suiza 12Hb engines, and the last 100 –
Gnome-Rhone Jupiter 9Ab radial engines. From 1932, the Br.19.7 variant was manufactured – the first five were built in France, the next 75 in Kraljevo (51 according to other publications), and a further 48 aircraft, lacking engines, were completed in 1935–1937 as Br.19.8's, with
Wright Cyclone radial engines. (Some publications give different numbers of Yugoslavian Bre.19s). Some of these Yugoslavian aircraft were used in combat after the
German attack on Yugoslavia in 1941. ; •
SFR Yugoslav Air Force operated one Croatian Br.19 taken by its pilot and delivered to the partisans of
Tito, and used in June–July 1942, until it was shot down. Another two, captured by the new Communist government forces in April 1945, were used to pursue
Ustashes. ==Record variants==