- Bolivia
- Botswana
- Cameroon: Used by the presidential guard.
- Chile
- Colombia: Standard service rifle. Produced under license by Indumil.[2]
- Costa Rica
- Djibouti
- Dominican Republic: Use by Comando Especial Antiterrorista ("anti-terrorism special forces").
- El Salvador
- Estonia: Uses 5.56mm versions of the Galil AR, SAR, ARM and the 7.62mm Galil Sniper.[3][4][5][6]
- Georgia
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- India
- Indonesia
- Israel
- Italy: Built locally by Bernardelli as the VB-SR; originally a simple clone of the Galil AR (using the standard Galil 35-round magazine), later modified as a Galil SAR copy using STANAG magazines; this last version was submitted in the late 1980s for the trial tests for the new Italian service rifle (won ultimately by the Beretta AR70/90) and acquired in only small quantities by the NOCS special operations team of the Italian National Police. It went out of production shortly thereafter, with no other known sales.
- Mexico: Used by some state, federal, and some local police departments.
- Mongolia: Specialized units have received small numbers of Galil SAR and Micro Galil carbines as well as the Galil Sniper.
- Myanmar
- Nepal
- Nicaragua: Used by la Guardia Nacional under the Somoza regime.
- Peru
- Philippines
- Portugal: Used only by select airborne units.
- South Africa: Standard assault rifle. Produced under license in a modified form as the R4 by Vektor (a division of Denel).
- Tonga
- Trinidad and Tobago
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