The IWI Galil ACE, also marketed as IWI ACE (or simply ACE), is a series of assault rifles and battle rifles originally developed and manufactured by Israel Weapon Industries (IWI) produced in 5.56ÃÂ45mm NATO, 7.62ÃÂ39mm and 7.62ÃÂ51mm NATO.
The IWI Galil ACE series is based upon the original design of the Galil, but instead utilises a modern design to increase its accuracy and lower its weight, while maintaining the original Galil's ergonomics, ease of maintenance and reliability under battle conditions.
In the design, emphasis was particularly placed on increasing the reliability and accuracy under adverse battlefield conditions.
The original Galil was built with a machined solid steel billet action in order to increase the structural integrity and survivability of the weapon. Unfortunately, this design resulted in a total weight of up to , depending on its variant, which was one of the primary criticisms from the Israel Defense Forces.
The Galil ACE has a significantly reduced weight. IWI redesigned the action to integrate the steel with polymer, which is much lighter than the fully steel receiver of the original Galil.
While the upper receiver is machined steel and the receiver top features a MIL-STD-1913 Picatinny rail, polymer has been introduced to the lower receiver of the weapon to reduce the gun's weight.
According to American Rifleman: "Although this rifle is clearly based on the AK design, it demonstrated a superior level of accuracy potential compared to several of its cousins. The best single group of [5 rounds at 100 yards] of 0.83â³ and five-group average of 0.98â³ was produced using the Federal Premium 123-gr. [] Power-Shok soft-point load" (testing done using 7.62ÃÂ39mm 16-inch barrelled variant).
The Galil ACE adopts the Galil Sniper trigger instead of the original Galil trigger, in order to improve accuracy compared to the standard Galil. This is a two-stage trigger, which IWI have modelled on the two-stage trigger of the M1 Garand.
According to American Rifleman, the two-stage trigger is "clean and smooth with a 4 lb. 13 oz. [] trigger pull according to a Lyman digital trigger gauge".
The gas tube, unlike the AK-47 system, is mounted on the rifle via a dovetailed slide machined on the receiver upper-front block. This avoids any movement of the gas block influencing barrel vibration, which would degrade accuracy.
The rifle uses the Galil's long-stroke piston system. The long-stroke system is found in the M1 Garand, AK-47 (upon which the Galil's internal mechanism design borrowed heavily) and more recently in the IWI Tavor.
The barrel is chrome-lined, cold hammer-forged, with a 1:7â³ twist for 5.56ÃÂ45mm NATO, 1:7.5â³ for 5.45ÃÂ39mm, 1:9.5â³ for 7.62ÃÂ39mm, and 1:12â³ for 7.62ÃÂ51mm NATO.
The Galil ACE has a fully adjustable iron sights with tritium front post and two dot tritium rear aperture. It also features a Picatinny rail for mounting various optical sight.
The standard buttstock found on the Galil ACE is a six-position telescopic stock that can be fitted with an optional cheek-piece to improve the sighting of the weapon when using an optical sight. An optional right folding version of the standard buttstock is also available.
The forearm consists of MIL-STD-1913 Picatinny rails on the bottom and both sides for mounting accessories such as aiming optics. The side forearm rails have central grooves to provide routing channels for electric wiring used by pressure switch activated accessories. The forearm comes with quick detachable polymer covering panels that can be mounted to protect the rails when a side or bottom rail has no accessories mounted to it. The gas tube above the barrel also has a Picatinny rail mounted on top that is aligned with the rail mounted on the cover over the receiver.
Another addition by IWI to the original Galil is the last round bolt catch (for variants of the ACE in 5.56ÃÂ45mm NATO only). The bolt hold-open feature is a common request of military customers, to reduce reloading times during combat.
IWI US introduced the Gen II line in 2023 which introduced a free-floating M-LOK handguard and M4-style compatible buttstock.
In October 2020, IWI US began production of an "extremely limited edition" 5.45ÃÂ39mm variant of the Galil ACE, available with a or barrel, producing a total of 545 rifles in each size. They are compatible with AK-74 magazines.
The Córdova is a Colombian Galil ACE variant produced under license via an agreement between Indumil and IWI.
The FAMAE has been producing licensed Galil ACE variants since 2014 as the Chilean Armed Forces' service rifle.
PLR systems, a subsidiary of Adani Defence was selected as the L2 bidder for a contract to supply 170,085 carbines worth about to the Indian Army and the Indian Navy as a replacement for ageing Stirling rifles. They will manufacture an optimised variant of the Galil ACE CQB under the production name Jeet, with deliveries to bring as soon as 2027. It features a 368 mm long barrel, a weight of 3.2 kg, and a rate of fire between 650-750 rounds per minute to a 300âÂÂ500 m range. The contract for 255,128 DRDO Close Quarter Battle carbines and 170,085 Adani Jeet carbines was signed on 30 December 2025.
The Peruvian government has plans to produce the ACE under license, establishing a factory to produce up to 2,000 rifles per month.
The RPC Fort has been producing licensed Galil ACE variants since 2014:
The IWI has established a $100 million factory in Vietnam via the Z111 Factory, to produce an unspecified number of Galil ACE assault rifles for the PAVN.
All ACEs used in Vietnam have the charging handles located at the right side of the rifle and replaced the Galil ACE handguards with traditional Galil-style handguards with Picatinny rail on top, replaced standard ACE buttstock with FN-FAL Paratrooper stocks, with modifications for simpler production and ease of use, the original fire selector replaced with AK-style fire selector. The new rifle has its new designations STV-215 and STV-380, the number indicated barrel length.
Multiple assault rifle designs based on the Galil ACE were developed, based on technology transfers and licensed production rights: