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British Airways goes aircraft shopping – what will replace its Boeing 777 fleet?

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Last week, Bloomberg reported (paywall) that British Airways and Iberia parent International Airlines Group (IAG) was in contact with Airbus and Boeing about further widebody aircraft purchases.

These days fleet decisions are made at the group level, with each airline having to make their case to IAG as to why they deserve investment in new aircraft.

In theory pooling orders should allow for better bulk discounts with manufacturers, although in reality IAG does not seem to make the same gigantic single-order purchases that are often announced by other airlines. A recent top-up order of six Boeing 787-10s for BA is indicative of this.

The current shopping spree, however, appears to be solely for BA, with Bloomberg reporting that “IAG is seeking to replace older 777s at its British Airways unit.”

This shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone. If anything, it’s surprising that it has taken this long.

With covid travel restrictions a thing of the past, airlines all over the world have been racking up orders for hundreds of aircraft as they try and replace the capacity they lost during covid. With BA’s Boeing 777-200ER fleet nearing an average age of 24 years (some are turning 27 soon) it was only a matter of time.

British Airways BA A350 in flight

BA’s fleet before and after covid

Prior to the pandemic, British Airways operated 135 long haul aircraft comprising:

  • 32 Boeing 747-400 (275-337 seats)
  • 45 Boeing 777-200ER
  • 12 Boeing 777-300ER
  • 12 Boeing 787-8 (214 seats)
  • 16 Boeing 787-9 (216 seats)
  • 1 787-10 (256 seats)
  • 12 A380 (469 seats)
  • 5 Airbus A350-1000 (331 seats)

Things changed dramatically during covid, with the retirement of all 32 Boeing 747s in July 2020. That singlehandedly wiped out 23% of its long haul fleet and a larger percentage of its overall capacity, given that the 747s were some of their largest aircraft by seat count.

British Airways 747

Since then, the long haul fleet has recovered slightly with the arrival of further A350s and 787-10s. Fundamentally, however, BA remains a smaller airline than it was in early 2020 with just 122 aircraft as of October 2023:

  • 43 Boeing 777-200ER
  • 16 Boeing 777-300ER
  • 12 Boeing 787-8 (214 seats)
  • 16 Boeing 787-9 (216 seats)
  • 7 787-10 (256 seats)
  • 12 A380 (469 seats)
  • 16 Airbus A350-1000 (331 seats)

Still to arrive are two more A350s, completing the fleet with 18 aircraft, as well as 11 more 787-10s. Also on order are 18 Boeing 777-9X, the next generation 777, now due to arrive no earlier than 2026.

Once all firm orders are delivered, it would leave the long haul fleet at 153 – just shy of 20 aircraft larger than in early 2020.

Of course, this does not take into account the increasing age of the Boeing 777 fleet. The earliest examples will be turning 30 in just a few years; the youngest in the fleet will be 21 by 2030.

Whilst BA has long had an older fleet (Virgin Atlantic’s average aircraft age is half that of BA, at around 7 years) it cannot fly these aircraft indefinitely. Maintenance checks will get increasingly expensive whilst fuel costs are only likely to rise.

Further on the horizon you’ll also find the retirement of the A380 fleet. The oldest of these turned ten this year, so they still likely have a good 10-15 years in them at least.

There’s no doubt then that BA needs some new aircraft, and preferably soonish.

What’s on the menu, British Airways?

For now, there is no indication as to which direction BA will go. It appears that discussions are ongoing with both Airbus and Boeing and engine manufacturers Rolls Royce and GE.

It seems the order is for at least 20 aircraft, according to Bloomberg.

BA already has a diverse long haul fleet so it is exceptionally unlikely that it will add a new aircraft type. This leaves the 787, 777X or A350 as the likeliest options.

In terms of capacity, BA is currently refurbishing its Boeing 777-200ER fleet with its new business class cabins. These aircraft feature between 235 and 272 seats overall; about half of them feature a First cabin with eight seats, hence the lower overall seat count.

Looking at seat counts, the most obvious replacement would be the 787-9 (216 seats), 787-10 (256 seats) or the A350-900.

Whilst BA doesn’t operate this variant of the A350 yet, it is part of the A350 family which BA already flies. In fact, the A350-900 may be the closest replacement in terms of capacity. Other airlines such as Singapore Airlines, Finnair and IAG sister airline Iberia feature between 250 and 350 seats on this aircraft in a three cabin configuration, so it would be a very close proxy to the existing 777-200ERs.

One other option, of course, is to go bigger. With Heathrow capacity constrained, the only way for BA to grow is to increase the size of its aircraft or operate more flights from other airports. The former is more attractive as it allows BA to retain the connectivity it has at Heathrow for transiting passengers.

In this case, the choice would be between the 787-10, A350-1000 and the 777-9X.

The 777-9X is arguably too big, although BA could opt for its smaller sibling, the 777-8X. The difference between the A350-1000 and the 787-10, at least in terms of capacity, is very small: the biggest differences here are the range and cargo capacity, with the A350-1000 capable of flying much further and/or carrying more cargo.

Range, however, is not a key metric for BA: the majority of its flights are less than 11 hours, which the 787-10 can handle perfectly fine. It would require a significant change in strategy for the A350’s range to come into play – not likely given BA’s increasing focus on North America in the past few decades.

There are other considerations, of course. Price and availability will also likely be a key factor. Boeing has recently signed a number of blockbuster deals with airlines including Riyadh Air and Air India for hundreds of 787s. It is struggling to ramp up production as quickly as Airbus has for the A350 following the pandemic, so availability may be constrained for some time.

At the same time Airbus, keen to win some widebody orders back from Boeing, may offer persuasive pricing to sweeten the deal.

Conclusion

This is all speculation, of course.

Whilst it seems clear that more aircraft will be needed, there are no concrete details on which way British Airways will walk. If anything, it will also be using this coverage as a negotiating tool to eke out improved deals from Airbus and Boeing.

Either way, the first aircraft from this potential order aren’t likely to arrive for another 3-4 years at the earliest. When it does, it will be a huge improvement for passengers with a lower cabin altitude across all models helping to reduce jet lag. All three aircraft also feature larger windows.

In the short term, we have the remaining A350 and 787-10 deliveries to look forward to, as well as the completion of the Boeing 777 Club Suite refurbishment which is likely to wrap up in the coming months. This will allow BA to get started on the 787-8s and A380s Club Suite refurbishments.


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Comments (114)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • JR says:

    I think it will be more 787-10s and A350-1000s at a ratio of 2:1. They can use the delayed 777-X program and threat of more A350s to bash down Boeing’s. The additional A350s will likely overlap with the retirement of the A380, and so BA will be able to flex capacity up or down depending on precise order timings.

  • John says:

    BA eill sweat their airframes well beyond their normal operating life. Look no further than the final years of the queen, being flown with non functional IFE, ripped and damaged interiors, leaking a/c and dodgy pressurisation.
    A350 a far superior passenger experience with most carriers but the ultra dense layout BA have fitted levels it down.

    • Rhys says:

      BA’s A350 really isn’t any more dense than most other airlines. In fact, many airlines have the exact same (business class) seats!

      • LittleNick says:

        Yep, flew QR Business on A350-1000 earlier in the year and the cabin crew apologised to me for the lack of toilets in the Business cabin, can’t remember exact numbers but wasn’t ideal but was ok, BA not the only ones with issues. But agreed BA have probably made it worse for themselves with the Galley.

  • Nnaeto says:

    I’ve flown the 350 a few times and I don’t really get the hype? I quite prefer the 787 because of the larger and dimmable windows, I can still see outside even if I don’t want that much light. The 350 is wider but let’s be honest, if you’re in economy it’s still crap any way. Having done it both the 787 and 350, I can’t say there’s much of a difference.

    • Rhys says:

      A350 now comes with dimmable windows too, if airlines want it. I agree that it’s nice to have some light although it’s annoying when crew lock you out of the controls!

      • Thegasman says:

        Looking at you AA & your enforced darkness throughout the cruise regardless of time of day!

        • Bernard says:

          You’re aware each seat has its own reading light?

          • Luke says:

            You’re missing the point – it’s nice to have the option of natural daylight on a day flight, especially if you’re trying to avoid sleep for jet lag purposes.

  • Stu_N says:

    Interesting piece. Purely from passenger perspective I’d like to see more A350s, they are so much nicer. But then I am not paying for them or trying to balance demand against deliveries and retirements.

    But a couple of questions, Rhys.

    “BA already has a diverse long haul fleet so it is exceptionally unlikely that it will add a new aircraft type.” What else is out there? I can only think of A330NEO. There’s no real prospect of new entrants into the wide body market as far as I know. The Chinese players are working on short haul, Embraer seem happy churning out E-series and Russia has been off the table for decades.

    Why is it so important to have the “right” size of an aircraft? It must be as for example on the 787, the 8/9/10 variants exist. The 787-8 needs all the expensive bits (flight control systems, engines and wings) you put on a -10, the difference is mainly length of fuselage so purchase cost shouldn’t be that much more. Are running costs really that critical that the off-chance of selling a few more seats every now and again isn’t worth the extra weight of the longer plane?

    • Harry T says:

      BA has serious problems with the chosen design of its a350 though. I prefer the a350 to 777 with most airlines but not BA.

      • Stu_N says:

        From passenger perspective they are great, well in Club Suite they are. Wish they had specked the external camera via IFE though like Finnair and Cathay.

        Chatting to crew on our Vegas flight a couple of weeks ago the cabin crew’s experience is much better than it was initially.

        • The Jetset Boyz says:

          All that’s needed is for BA to pay the licensing fee and you’ll get to watch the camera feed on the IFE.

      • Stu_N says:

        “Specked” should be specced of course!

      • Doug M says:

        Yes the galley arrangement blocking the toilet is very poor, desperation to squeeze in extra seats. The A350 is the clear altitude and humidity winner, although the 787 is right there too.

      • Rhys says:

        Yes, but that’s something they can fix with a new order. They also have issues with their 787-10s, which don’t have crew rest. Causing a massive headache. So the next bunch would likely be different!

        • dougzz99 says:

          Why? It’s not as if they didn’t know the situation when they placed the original order. BA think revenue first, second and last.

  • Paul says:

    More A350-1000s please, just sort the layout out. Or go Global and buy up A380s.

  • Dace says:

    Can they not just get a few more A380’s? That would solve a few immediate issues and then they could order with less immediate need.

    • Rhys says:

      Not that many destinations can support 500 seats on a single flight.

      • Dace says:

        Couldn’t they just reduce the number of flights to the destinations that can, I am thinking NYC, LA, Singapore, Dubai, Tokyo and then use the smaller craft that are flying there to other destinations. I know there is a big argument about how timings and frequency play a big part in bookings, but with BA’s dominance in the UK/London Market, surely they have a little more wriggle room?

        • Rhys says:

          They already fly the A380 to LA, Dubai. NYC they want frequencies, hence the huge number of flights and why they don’t operate their biggest aircraft on the route.

    • jjoohhnn says:

      Refurbishing them is pricey though.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      At JFK only T4 has A380 equipped gates.

      If BA eve envisaged flying it to JFK then it never did anything to prep for it such as adding / converting a gate at T7 or when AA expanded T8.

  • iamlost says:

    Which routes do the A350s fly today? I’ve flown on every other type in the BA fleet except these. The A350 is hands down my favourite in the Qatar fleet, so I’d love to see more of these at BA.

    • G says:

      Vancouver, San Diego, New York, Toronto Hong Kong, Denver and Sao Paulo are some of the main destinations BA use for the A350.

  • BahrainLad says:

    A mix of A350-900s and A350-1000s would be ideal.

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