Thales Group supplies electronic devices and equipment used by the French Armed Forces from its past as Thomson-CSF, including the
SPECTRA helmet for the army and the
gendarmerie. It has worked with
Dassault Aviation on the
Dassault Rafale aircraft and made its
SPECTRA defensive aids. Thales often worked with DCNS and designed the electronics used on French ships, and it is involved in the construction of both the and
FREMM programs. Thales, as Thomson-CSF, was involved in the
Taiwan frigates scandal, relating to the sale of s to Taiwan. It is also present in
Eurosam as Thomson-CSF was a founder of the consortium along with
Aérospatiale and
Alenia Aeronautica. In February 2004, Thales was awarded a contract for a new command and control system for the French Navy, the SIC 21, that will be fitted on the aircraft carrier
Charles de Gaulle, along with numerous navy vessels and shore locations. Additionally, the initially planned
French aircraft carrier PA2 involved Thales as the main designer of the ship. However, the project was cancelled in 2013. Thales is also working on
X-ray imaging, finances, energy and operating commercial satellites. By 2012, the company is mainly composed of five branches: Defense, Security, Space, Aerospace and Ground transportation. Among the EU-supported projects Thales participates in are: •
Galileo - the European satellite navigation system, similar to
GPS/
Glonass/
BeiDou •
SESAR - both as an aircraft equipment manufacturer and as an ATM system vendor
Defence The company's design won the competition for the Royal Navy
Future Carrier (CVF) programme, leading to the
Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carrier. It is part of the AirTanker consortium, the winning bid for the RAF's
Future Strategic Tanker Aircraft. Thales UK won the contract for the
British Army UAV programme,
Watchkeeper; however, in January 2026, the company divested its 49% stake in the manufacturing joint venture, UAV Tactical Systems (U-TacS), to its partner
Elbit Systems. It also produces the
SWARM remote weapon station. Thales simulators include full motion devices as well as flat panels and other training facilities.
Thales Air Defence produces a range of short-range missile systems such as the
Starstreak surface-to-air missile and the
Lightweight Multi-role Missile (LMM). In 2022, following the start of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, Thales was amongst several major arms manufacturers to report a sharp increase in interim sales and profits.
Aerospace The Thales ATM (Air Traffic Management) solution is marketed under the name "TopSky", previously named "EuroCat". Thales supplies avionics to civil aircraft manufacturers, including
fly-by-wire systems, cockpit systems, navigation computers, satellite communication, inflight entertainment and electrical systems. The coordination of Thales parts' servicing and maintenance is coordinated by its
MRO division;
OEM services, which handles the repair flow for component maintenance support. In November 2017, Thales acquired a UK radar provider called Aveillant which produces software-defined holographic radar technology, which can detect small targets such as drones. In February 2018, Thales won on a A$1.2 billion ($946 million) contract with
Airservices Australia and the
Australian Department of Defence to unify Australia's
civil and
military airspace under a single
air traffic control system, named "OneSKY".
Ground transportation Thales has had major involvement in the UK rail industry as a result of the Racal merger and the 2006 acquisition of Alcatel's Rail Signalling Solutions division and transport business. As of 2025, Thales is to modernise 40 per cent of London Tube network
London Underground. In Denmark, Thales wholly owns the "East-west Consortium" that has been contracted to provide a nationwide travel card (Danish: "
Rejsekort"). In India, Thales was selected in December 2014 by the New Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) to deliver a completely automated fare collection system, as well as ticketing equipment. Thales has also been contracted by
Hyderabad Metro Rail since 2017 to provide train control automation and communication services for the metro in
Hyderabad. In 2014, the company was tasked with equipping the public transport system of
Bordeaux, France, with a contactless ticketing and revenue collection system, to be installed by February 2017. However, due to delays, the system was not expected to be operational until 2019. A similar incident occurred in March 2019 in
Hong Kong on the
Tsuen Wan line. In Vietnam, the company was awarded a €265 million contract in 2017 to deliver the telecommunications system for the currently constructed Line 3 of the
Hanoi metro. Running behind schedule by one year, the metro line is stated to be launched in 2023. In Turkey, the Thales team delivered the first High Speed Line in the country in 2009, and has completed more than of the
Ankara–Istanbul high-speed railway. On 31 May 2024, Thales' ground transportation division was sold off to the Japanese firm
Hitachi Rail in exchange for $2.5 billion. == Other activities ==