Projected Two-Month Cost of Operation Epic Fury
PWBM estimates Operation Epic Fury has cost $27–28 billion in the first 32 days, with projected two-month direct costs of $38–47 billion if fighting continues to the end of April, with another $5 billion in indirect costs.
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The U.S. federal government has spent an estimated $27–28 billion on Operation Epic Fury in the first 32 days since strikes on Iran began February 28, 2026. Assuming operations continue through end of April, the total two-month direct cost lands in a range of $38 to $47 billion, with a base-case estimate of approximately $42.5 billion. These costs do not include around $5 billion in indirect costs or potential interest costs if deficit financed.
Budget Estimates (2 Months)
The estimates in the accompanying data file are built from four cost phases, each anchored to official government data or authoritative independent analysis and summarized in Table 1.
| Phase | Days | Dates | Daily Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Days 1–6 | Feb 28 – Mar 5 | ~$2.1B/day |
| Phase 2 | Days 7–24 | Mar 6 – Mar 23 | ~$601M/day |
| Phase 3 | Days 25–32 | Mar 24 – Mar 31 | ~$500M/day |
| Phase 4 (projected) | Days 33–62 | Apr 1 – Apr 30 | $350–650M/day |
Phase 1 (Days 1–6, Feb 28 – Mar 5) averaged roughly $2.1 billion per day — dominated by the use of expensive standoff munitions. The Pentagon briefed the Senate on March 10–11 that just the first six days cost at least $11.3 billion in unbudgeted outlays, primarily munitions replacement. The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) revised that figure upward to approximately $12.7 billion once attrition, equipment losses, and base damage were included. The high burn rate reflects the cost structure of the opening salvo: Tomahawk cruise missiles (~$3.5 million each), SM-3 and SM-6 interceptors (up to $4–5 million each), and AGM-154 glide bombs (~$600,000 each) were expended by the hundreds in the first days.
Phase 2 (Days 7–24, Mar 6 – Mar 23) saw costs fall sharply to approximately $601 million per day, as the military shifted to cheaper precision-guided munitions — primarily JDAM kits costing under $100,000 each — and Iranian ballistic missile launches dropped by roughly 90% from their peak, dramatically cutting U.S. air defense interceptor expenditures. CSIS estimated cumulative costs at $16.5 billion by Day 12, and the Center for American Progress (CAP), applying the same $601 million/day rate forward, projected costs crossing $25 billion around Day 26. Cumulative costs through the end of Phase 2 (March 23) stand at approximately $23.5 billion.
Phase 3 (Days 25–32, Mar 24 – Mar 31) applies a further step-down to approximately $500 million per day, consistent with CSIS’s forward projection as operations settled into a sustained but lower-intensity tempo and ceasefire negotiations began — though no deal was reached. This adds roughly $4 billion, bringing the total through March 31 to approximately $27.5 billion. The Low and High columns in the data file are blank through the end of Phase 3, as these days are treated as known point estimates rather than scenarios.
Note: Phases 1–3 (Feb 28 – Mar 31) show the base-case cumulative cost treated as known point estimates; the solid line transitions to dashed at April 1. Phase 4 (Apr 1 – Apr 30) is projected under three daily-rate scenarios: $350M/day (low), $500M/day (base), and $650M/day (high). The projection fan opens from the March 31 cumulative estimate of $27.5 billion. Sources: CENTCOM, DoD, CSIS, Center for American Progress, AEI.
Phase 4 (Days 33–62, Apr 1 – Apr 30) is fully projected. With no ceasefire in effect as of April 1, the base case continues at $500 million per day for all 30 days of April, adding $15 billion. A low scenario of $350 million/day applies if operations wind down significantly or a ceasefire takes hold early in the month; a high scenario of $650 million/day reflects possible re-escalation.
End-of-April cumulative totals by scenario are shown in Table 2:
| Scenario | April Daily Rate | Total, Feb 28 – Apr 30 |
|---|---|---|
| Low | $350M/day | $38.0 billion |
| Base | $500M/day | $42.5 billion |
| High | $650M/day | $47.0 billion |
Not Included
The figures above count only direct, unbudgeted federal military spending — and even on that narrow definition, they likely understate the true cost. The Pentagon’s $11.3 billion figure explicitly excluded pre-strike repositioning costs (estimated at ~$630 million by AEI’s Elaine McCusker), routine O&M costs for ships, aircraft, and personnel in theater (~$196 million in the first six days alone, per CSIS), and allied resupply transfers. Extending those omitted routine O&M costs across all 62 days adds a further $2–3 billion not captured in any public estimate. Beyond accounting gaps, long-term veterans’ care and disability benefits for the almost 300 U.S. service members already injured thus far will accumulate over several decades.
References
- CENTCOM Press Release — “U.S. Forces Launch Operation Epic Fury,” U.S. Central Command, February 28, 2026.
- DoD/Pentagon Fact Sheet — “Operation Epic Fury Fact Sheet: The First 29 Days,” U.S. Department of Defense, March 28–29, 2026.
- Mark F. Cancian, “Iran War Cost Estimate Update: $11.3 Billion at Day 6, $16.5 Billion at Day 12,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, March 12, 2026.
- Mark F. Cancian, “$3.7 Billion: Estimated Cost of Epic Fury’s First 100 Hours,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, March 5 (published March 16), 2026.
- Center for American Progress, “By the End of the Week, the Trump Administration’s War in Iran Will Likely Have Cost $25 Billion,” March 23, 2026.
- Elaine McCusker (AEI), “The Dollars and Cents of Military Action Against Iran,” Forbes, February 26, 2026.