Aircraft are generally designed and produced to be maintainable. Recently, the U.S. Air Force, due to increasing aircraft unit costs, began to investigate early conceptual designs for attritable (unmanned) aircraft. Attritability is a system characteristic that trades reliability and maintainability for low-cost of a system meant for reuse — at least a few times. This characteristic is affected by system attributes like reliability, redundancy, reparability and cost. This concept of a trading these attributes for lower cost presents a very interesting design space for systems engineers, but it presents several challenges. This paper introduces the system characteristic of attritability and shows the far-reaching impacts and challenges that this novel attribute presents through the use of reliability modeling and cost estimation techniques.