List of current ships of the United States Navy

The United States Navy has over 485 ships in both active service and the reserve fleet, with approximately 90 more in either the planning and ordering stages or under construction, according to the Naval Vessel Register and published reports. This list includes ships that are owned and leased by the US Navy; ships that are formally commissioned, by way of ceremony, and non-commissioned. Ships denoted with the prefix "USS" are commissioned ships. Prior to commissioning, ships may be described as a "pre-commissioning unit" or PCU, but are officially referred to by name with no prefix.[1] US Navy support ships are often non-commissioned ships organized and operated by Military Sealift Command. Among these support ships, those denoted "USNS" are owned by the US Navy.[1] Those denoted by "MV" or "SS" are chartered.

USS Constitution under sail for the first time in 116 years on 21 July 1997

Current ships include commissioned warships that are in active service, as well as ships that are part of Military Sealift Command, the support component and the Ready Reserve Force, that while non-commissioned, are still part of the effective force of the US Navy. Future ships listed are those that are in the planning stages, or are currently under construction, from having the keel laid to fitting out and final sea trials.

There exist a number of former US Navy ships which are museum ships (not listed here), some of which may be US government-owned. One of these, USS Constitution, a three-masted tall ship, is one of the original six frigates of the United States Navy. It is the oldest naval vessel afloat, and still retains its commission (and hence is listed here), as a special commemoration for that ship alone.

Current ships

Commissioned

Note

A Both USS Constitution and USS Pueblo are commissioned vessels, but are not considered part of the active combat fleet.

Non-commissioned

Support

Ready Reserve Force ships

Ready Reserve Force ships are maintained by the United States Maritime Administration and are part of the United States Navy ship inventory. If activated, these ships would be operated by Military Sealift Command.

Reserve fleet

Future ships

Under construction

Note: Ships listed here may be referred to as "pre-commissioning unit" or "PCU" in various sources including US Navy webpages.[502] While 'PCU' might be used informally as a prefix in some sources, it is not an official ship prefix.[1] Ships listed here may be delivered to United States Navy but are not actively commissioned

On order

The following ships have been ordered but have not yet had their keel laid down, and therefore have not reached 'under construction' status.

Fleet totals

Commissioned (USS) – 240


Non-commissioned (USNS) – 97


Support (MV, RV – or no prefix) – 76


Ready Reserve Force ships (MV, SS, GTS) – 51


Reserve Fleet ships (USS, USNS) – 22


Under construction – 55


On order – 33


Totals

Commissioned:240
Non-commissioned:97
Support:76
Ready Reserve Force ships:51
Reserve fleet:22
Grand total:486

Images

Commissioned

Non-commissioned

Support

Ready Reserve Force ships

Reserve fleet

Under construction

On order

See also

References

  1. "Ship Naming in the United States Navy". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 9 January 2020. The prefix "USS," meaning "United States Ship," is used in official documents to identify a commissioned ship of the Navy. It applies to a ship while she is in commission. Before commissioning, or after decommissioning, she is referred to by name, with no prefix.
  2. Homeport as listed at the Naval Vessel Register Archived 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. Abraham Lincoln
  4. Alabama
  5. Alaska
  6. Albany
  7. Alexandria
  8. Burgess, Richard R. (11 December 2020). "Navy Plans to Retire 48 Ships During 2022-2026". Seapower.
  9. America
  10. Anchorage
  11. Annapolis
  12. Antietam
  13. Arleigh Burke
  14. Arlington
  15. Asheville
  16. Ashland
  17. "Navy Wants to Decommission 39 Warships in 2023". USNI News. 15 August 2022.
  18. Bainbridge
  19. Barry
  20. Bataan
  21. Benfold
  22. Billings
  23. Blue Ridge
  24. Boise
  25. Boxer
  26. Bulkeley
  27. Bunker Hill
  28. "Document: Navy's 30-Year Shipbuilding Plan to Congress for Fiscal Year 2016". USNI News. 3 April 2015.
  29. California
  30. Cape St. George
  31. Carl Vinson
  32. Carney
  33. Carter Hall
  34. Chafee
  35. Charleston
  36. Charlotte
  37. Cheyenne
  38. Chief
  39. Chosin
  40. Chung-Hoon
  41. Cincinnati
  42. Cole
  43. Colorado
  44. Columbia
  45. Columbus
  46. Comstock
  47. Connecticut
  48. Constitution
  49. Cooperstown
  50. Cowpens
  51. Curtis Wilbur
  52. Daniel Inouye
  53. Decatur
  54. Delaware
  55. Delbert D. Black
  56. Detroit
  57. Devastator
  58. Dewey
  59. Dextrous
  60. Donald Cook
  61. Dwight D. Eisenhower
  62. Emory S. Land
  63. Essex
  64. Farragut
  65. Fitzgerald
  66. Florida
  67. Forrest Sherman
  68. Fort Lauderdale
  69. Fort Worth
  70. Frank Cable
  71. Frank E. Petersen Jr.
  72. Gabrielle Giffords
  73. George Washington
  74. George H. W. Bush
  75. Georgia
  76. Gerald R. Ford
  77. Germantown
  78. Gettysburg
  79. Gladiator
  80. Gonzalez
  81. Gravely
  82. Green Bay
  83. Greeneville
  84. Gridley
  85. Gunston Hall
  86. Halsey
  87. Hampton
  88. Harpers Ferry
  89. Harry S. Truman
  90. Hartford
  91. Hawaii
  92. Helena
  93. Henry M. Jackson
  94. Hershel "Woody" Williams
  95. Higgins
  96. Hopper
  97. Howard
  98. Illinois
  99. Indiana
  100. Indianapolis
  101. Iwo Jima
  102. Jackson
  103. James E. Williams
  104. Jason Dunham
  105. Jefferson City
  106. Jimmy Carter
  107. John C. Stennis
  108. John Finn
  109. John P. Murtha
  110. John Paul Jones
  111. John S. McCain
  112. John Warner
  113. Kansas City
  114. Kearsarge
  115. Kentucky
  116. Key West
  117. Kidd
  118. Laboon
  119. Lake Champlain
  120. Lake Erie
  121. Lassen
  122. Lenah Sutcliffe Higbee
  123. Lewis B. Puller
  124. Leyte Gulf
  125. Little Rock
  126. Louisiana
  127. Mahan
  128. Maine
  129. Makin Island
  130. Manchester
  131. Maryland
  132. Mason
  133. McCampbell
  134. McFaul
  135. Mesa Verde
  136. Michael Monsoor
  137. Michael Murphy
  138. Michigan
  139. Miguel Keith
  140. Milius
  141. Milwaukee
  142. Minnesota
  143. Minneapolis-Saint Paul
  144. Mississippi
  145. Missouri
  146. Mitscher
  147. Mobile
  148. Mobile Bay
  149. Momsen
  150. Montana
  151. Montgomery
  152. Montpelier
  153. Mount Whitney
  154. Mustin
  155. Nebraska
  156. Nevada
  157. New Hampshire
  158. New Mexico
  159. New Orleans
  160. New York
  161. Newport News
  162. Nimitz
  163. Nitze
  164. Normandy
  165. North Carolina
  166. North Dakota
  167. O'Kane
  168. Oak Hill
  169. Oakland
  170. Ohio
  171. Omaha
  172. Oregon
  173. Oscar Austin
  174. Pasadena
  175. Patriot
  176. Paul Hamilton
  177. Paul Ignatius
  178. Pearl Harbor
  179. Pennsylvania
  180. Philippine Sea
  181. Pinckney
  182. Pioneer
  183. Porter
  184. Portland
  185. Preble
  186. Princeton
  187. Pueblo
  188. Rafael Peralta
  189. Ralph Johnson
  190. Ramage
  191. Rhode Island
  192. Robert Smalls
  193. "SECNAV Renames Ticonderoga-class Guided Missile Cruiser USS Chancellorsville after Robert Smalls" (Press release). United States Navy. 27 February 2023. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  194. Ronald Reagan
  195. Roosevelt
  196. Ross
  197. Rushmore
  198. Russell
  199. Sampson
  200. San Antonio
  201. San Diego
  202. San Jacinto
  203. San Juan
  204. Santa Barbara
  205. Santa Fe
  206. Savannah
  207. Scranton
  208. Seawolf
  209. Sentry
  210. Shiloh
  211. Shoup
  212. Sioux City
  213. Somerset
  214. South Dakota
  215. Springfield
  216. Spruance
  217. St. Louis
  218. Sterett
  219. Stethem
  220. Stockdale
  221. Stout
  222. Tennessee
  223. Texas
  224. The Sullivans
  225. Theodore Roosevelt
  226. Thomas Hudner
  227. Toledo
  228. Topeka
  229. Tortuga
  230. Tripoli
  231. Truxtun
  232. Tucson
  233. Tulsa
  234. Vermont
  235. Vicksburg
  236. Virginia
  237. Warrior
  238. Washington
  239. Wasp
  240. Wayne E. Meyer
  241. West Virginia
  242. William P. Lawrence
  243. Winston Churchill
  244. Wichita
  245. Wyoming
  246. Zumwalt
  247. 1st Lt. Baldomero Lopez
  248. 1st Lt. Jack Lummus
  249. 2nd Lt. John P. Bobo
  250. Able
  251. Alan Shepard
  252. Amelia Earhart
  253. Apalachicola
  254. Arctic
  255. Arrowhead
  256. Big Horn
  257. Black Powder
  258. Bowditch
  259. Brittin
  260. Bruce C. Heezen
  261. Brunswick
  262. Burlington
  263. Carl Brashear
  264. Carson City
  265. Catawba
  266. Cesar Chavez
  267. Charles Drew
  268. Charlton
  269. Choctaw County
  270. City of Bismarck (ex-Bismarck ex-Sacrifice)
  271. Comfort
  272. Dahl
  273. Eagleview
  274. Effective
  275. Fall River
  276. "Vessel details for: FAST TEMPO (Offshore Supply Ship) – IMO 9347401, MMSI 369465000, Call Sign NAJK Registered in USA | AIS Marine Traffic". MarineTraffic.com. Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  277. "MSC port engineers complete overhaul of USNS Wheeler and Fast Tempo". mscsealift.dodlive.mil.
  278. Fisher
  279. Grasp
  280. Gilliland
  281. Gordon
  282. Guadalupe
  283. Guam
  284. GySgt. Fred W. Stockham
  285. Henry J. Kaiser
  286. Henson
  287. Howard O. Lorenzen
  288. Impeccable
  289. John Ericsson
  290. John Glenn
  291. John Lenthall
  292. John Lewis
  293. Joshua Humphreys
  294. Kanawha
  295. Laramie
  296. Leroy Grumman
  297. Lewis and Clark
  298. Loyal
  299. Maj. Stephen W. Pless
  300. Maury
  301. "SECNAV Renames Pathfinder-class Oceanographic Survey Ship USNS Maury after Marie Tharp" (Press release). United States Navy. 8 March 2023. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  302. Mary Sears
  303. Matthew Perry
  304. Medgar Evers
  305. Mercy
  306. Millinocket
  307. Montford Point
  308. Newport
  309. Pathfinder
  310. Patuxent
  311. Pecos
  312. PFC Dewayne T. Williams
  313. PFC Eugene A. Obregon
  314. Pililaau
  315. Pomeroy
  316. Puerto Rico
  317. Rappahannock
  318. Red Cloud
  319. Richard E. Byrd
  320. Robert E. Peary
  321. Sacagawea
  322. Salvor
  323. Seay
  324. MV Sgt. Matej Kocak
  325. MV Sgt. William R. Button
  326. Sisler
  327. Soderman
  328. Spearhead
  329. Supply
  330. Tippecanoe
  331. Trenton (ex-Resolute)
  332. Vadm K. R. Wheeler
  333. Victorious
  334. Wally Schirra
  335. Washington Chambers
  336. Waters
  337. Watkins
  338. Watson
  339. Westwind
  340. William McLean
  341. Yano
  342. Yuma
  343. Yukon
  344. Zeus
  345. No Name (ex Puerto Rico)
  346. APL-2
  347. APL-4
  348. APL-5
  349. APL-15
  350. APL-18
  351. APL-29
  352. APL-32
  353. APL-42
  354. APL-45
  355. APL-50
  356. APL-58
  357. APL-61
  358. APL-62
  359. APL-65
  360. APL-66
  361. APL-67
  362. APL-68
  363. APL-69
  364. APL-70
  365. Agamenticus
  366. Arco
  367. RV Atlantis
  368. Baker
  369. Battle Point
  370. C Champion
  371. C Commando
  372. "Ultimate Stealth Ship". cimsec.org. 12 October 2017. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  373. "The Navy Is Converting A Cargo Vessel into A Special Operations Mothership". Business Insider. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  374. Capt. David I. Lyon
  375. Canonchet
  376. Deception
  377. Defiant
  378. Dekanawida
  379. Delores Chouest
  380. Discovery Bay
  381. Empire State
  382. Evergreen State
  383. "Galveston/Petrochem Producer" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  384. HOS Dominator
  385. Keokuk
  386. RV Kilo Moana
  387. LTC John U.D. Page
  388. Maersk Peary
  389. MV Maj. Bernard F. Fisher
  390. Malama
  391. Menominee
  392. Mercer
  393. Mohegan
  394. Neil Armstrong
  395. Neodesha
  396. Nueces
  397. Olympus
  398. Paul F. Foster
  399. Pokagon
  400. Prevail
  401. Puyallup
  402. Rainier
  403. "Vessel review: Rainier—Dakota Creek delivers first unit of new yard tug class to US Navy". Baird Maritime. 5 October 2020.
  404. Reliant
  405. RV Roger Revelle
  406. Sally Ride
  407. Santaquin
  408. Sea-based X-band Radar
  409. Sea Eagle
  410. Sea Fighter
  411. Seminole
  412. Sentinel
  413. Shippingport
  414. SLNC Corsica
  415. SLNC Pax
  416. MV SSG Edward A. Carter Jr.
  417. Skenandoa
  418. RV Thomas G. Thompson
  419. "TransAtlantic" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  420. Manhattan
  421. YT-800
  422. Washtucna
  423. YT-801
  424. Valiant
  425. Wanamassa
  426. GTS Admiral W. M. Callaghan
  427. SS Algol
  428. SS Altair
  429. SS Antares
  430. SS Bellatrix
  431. MV Cape Decision
  432. MV Cape Diamond
  433. MV Cape Domingo
  434. MV Cape Douglas
  435. MV Cape Ducato
  436. MV Cape Edmont
  437. SS Cape Farewell
  438. SS Cape Flattery
  439. SS Cape Girardeau
  440. MV Cape Henry
  441. MV Cape Horn
  442. MV Cape Hudson
  443. SS Cape Inscription
  444. SS Cape Intrepid
  445. SS Cape Isabel
  446. SS Cape Island
  447. SS Cape Jacob
  448. MV Cape Kennedy
  449. MV Cape Knox
  450. SS Cape May
  451. MV Cape Mohican
  452. MV Cape Orlando
  453. MV Cape Race
  454. MV Cape Ray
  455. MV Cape Rise
  456. MV Cape Taylor
  457. MV Cape Texas
  458. MV Cape Trinity
  459. MV Cape Victory
  460. MV Cape Vincent
  461. MV Cape Washington
  462. MV Cape Wrath
  463. USNS Capella
  464. SS Cornhusker State
  465. SS Curtiss
  466. USNS Denebola
  467. SS Flickertail State
  468. SS Gem State
  469. SS Gopher State
  470. SS Grand Canyon State
  471. SS Keystone State
  472. SS Petersburg
  473. USNS Pollux
  474. USNS Regulus
  475. Shughart
  476. SS Wright
  477. ""NAVSEA Inactive Ship Inventory 2 January 2015" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 January 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  478. Anzio
  479. Benavidez
  480. Bob Hope
  481. Chicago
  482. "USS Coronado (LCS 4) Decommissions" (Press release). United States Navy. 14 September 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  483. Coronado
  484. "USS Fort McHenry Decommissions After 33 Years of Service". miragenews.com. miragenews.com. 28 March 2021. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  485. Grapple
  486. "Navy Decommissions First Littoral Combat Ship USS Freedom, Strikes Tug USNS Sioux". USNI News. 4 October 2021. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
  487. Hue City
  488. Invincible
  489. Independence
  490. Mendonca
  491. Monterey
  492. Peleliu
  493. Port Royal
  494. "Floating Drydock Resolute Ends 58 Years of Service to Navy" (Press release). United States Navy. 11 July 2003. NNS031107-31. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  495. "AFDM-10". Naval Vessel Register. 12 December 2017. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  496. Salvage
  497. Tarawa
  498. Vella Gulf
  499. Walter S. Diehl
  500. Whidbey Island
  501. "Navy Decommissions USS Whidbey Island". USNI News. 22 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  502. "PCU Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) Welcomes 60 New Crew Members" (Press release). United States Navy. 6 June 2013. NNS130606-12. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  503. Arizona
  504. Arkansas
  505. Augusta
  506. Beloit
  507. Bougainville
  508. Canberra
  509. Carl M. Levin
  510. "Navy Awards General Dynamics Bath Iron Works $644 Million for Construction of DDG 51 Class Destroyer" (PDF) (Press release). Bath Iron Works. 31 March 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  511. Cherokee Nation
  512. Cleveland
  513. Cody
  514. Constellation
  515. Megan, Eckstein (31 August 2022). "Marinette Marine to begin building first Constellation frigate". Defense News. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  516. District of Columbia
  517. Doris Miller
  518. Earl Warren
  519. Enterprise
  520. "HII Lays Keel of Future Aircraft Carrier USS Enterprise". USNI News. 5 April 2022. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  521. Fallujah
  522. "HII Begins Fabrication of Amphibious Assault Ship Fallujah (LHA 9)" (Press release). Huntington Ingalls Industries. 20 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  523. George M. Neal
  524. "HII Begins Fabrication of Destroyer George M. Neal (DDG 131)" (Press release). Huntington Ingalls Industries. 6 December 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  525. Harrisburg
  526. Harvey C. Barnum Jr.
  527. Harvey Milk
  528. Hyman G. Rickover
  529. Idaho
  530. Iowa
  531. Jack H. Lucas
  532. Jeremiah Denton
  533. John Basilone
  534. John F. Kennedy
  535. John L. Canley
  536. Kingsville
  537. Louis H. Wilson Jr.
  538. Lyndon B. Johnson
  539. "Second Zumwalt Destroyer Arrives in San Diego; Third Launches in Maine". USNI News. 10 December 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
  540. Lucy Stone
  541. "General Dynamics NASSCO Begins Construction on Fifth Ship in the T-AO Fleet Oiler Program for the U.S. Navy" (Press release). National Steel and Shipbuilding Company. 21 October 2022. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  542. Marinette
  543. Massachusetts
  544. Muscogee Creek Nation
  545. "Navy Names Future Vessel to Honor Muscogee Creek Nation" (Press release). United States Navy. 15 January 2021. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  546. Nantucket
  547. Navajo
  548. New Jersey
  549. Patrick Gallagher
  550. Pierre
  551. Pittsburgh
  552. "Start of Fabrication Begins for Future USS Pittsburgh" (Press release). United States Navy. 9 September 2022. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  553. Point Loma
  554. Quentin Walsh
  555. Richard M. McCool Jr.
  556. "Fabrication Begins on Amphibious Assault Ship Richard M. McCool, Jr" (Press release). United States Navy. 30 July 2018. NNS180730-29.
  557. Robert Ballard
  558. "SECNAV Names Future Oceanographic Survey Ship USNS Robert Ballard" (Press release). United States Navy. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  559. Robert E. Simanek
  560. Robert F. Kennedy
  561. Saginaw Ojibwe Anishinabek
  562. Sam Nunn
  563. "HII Begins Fabrication of Destroyer Sam Nunn (DDG 133)" (Press release). Huntington Ingalls Industries. 15 December 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  564. Sojourner Truth
  565. "General Dynamics NASSCO Begins Construction on Sixth Ship in the T-AO Fleet Oiler Program for the U.S. Navy" (Press release). National Steel and Shipbuilding Company. 27 March 2023. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
  566. Ted Stevens
  567. Utah
  568. William Charette
  569. No Name (ATS11)
  570. "Austal USA starts construction on first steel ship" (Press release). Austal USA. 11 July 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  571. No Name (ATS12)
  572. APL-71
  573. "US Navy Awards Bollinger Shipyards Contract to Build Sixth Berthing Barge" (Press release). Bollinger Shipyards. 11 April 2023. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  574. Barb
  575. "SECNAV Names Navy's First-in-Class Expeditionary Medical Ship after National Naval Medical Center Bethesda" (Press release). United States Navy. 15 May 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  576. Chesapeake
  577. "SECNAV Names Future Vessels while aboard Historic Navy Ship" (Press release). United States Navy. 15 January 2021. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  578. Congress
  579. J. William Middendorf
  580. John E. Kilmer
  581. John F. Lehman
  582. John H. Dalton
  583. Lenni Lenape
  584. Oklahoma
  585. Richard G. Lugar
  586. Ruth Bader Ginsburg
  587. Silversides
  588. Tang
  589. Telesforo Trinidad
  590. Thad Cochran
  591. Thomas G. Kelley
  592. Thurgood Marshall
  593. Wahoo
  594. Wisconsin
  595. O'Rourke, Ronald (9 August 2017). "Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  596. No Name (SSN809)
  597. No Name (SSN810)
  598. No Name (SSN811)
  599. No Name (LPD32)
  600. "Fincantieri to Build the Fourth Constellation-Class frigate for the US Navy" (Press release). Fincantieri. 19 May 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  601. No Name (ATS13)
  602. No Name (ATS14)
  603. No Name (EPF16)
  604. "NDIA Expeditionary Warfare Operations Conference 13 October 2016" (PDF). ndiastorage.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net. 13 October 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2018.
  605. No Name (ESB8)
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