Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

I head to Iceland as Icelandair receives its first A321LR – and its first ever Airbus

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

On Tuesday, Icelandair took delivery of its first A321LR aircraft.

By itself, that isn’t notable – the ‘LR’ Long Range variant has been in service with JetBlue, Aer Lingus and TAP Air Portugal for a few years. But this was a big day for another reason: for the first time in its 87-year history, the airline will fly an Airbus aircraft.

Icelandair has historically had an all-Boeing fleet. With the exception of a few regional aircraft, which it acquired following the integration of Air Iceland Connect, it operates a fleet of Boeing 757s, 767s and 737MAX.

Icelandair A321LR

Airbus has managed to cut through the Boeing stranglehold, whether through cut-throat pricing or simply by offering a better suited aircraft. This is because Icelandair’s business model as a transatlantic connector is almost uniquely suited to the A321LR and XLR family, of which it has 17 on order with options for a further 12.

Both variants allow the airline to operate flights between 4,000nm and 4,700nm, putting all of Europe and all of the United States and Canada within its reach.

The A321LR that landed at Keflavik Airport on Tuesday is the first of four. The balance will be the even longer range XLR variant, capable of flying up to 4,700nm depending on the cabin configuration.

Icelandair A321LR

In theory, this allows Icelandair to operate flights into the Northern latitudes of South America, Central Africa and even India, although those are unlikely given its current strategy of shuttling passengers between North America and Europe via its conveniently placed hub. Think of it as the Dubai of the North: convenient geography for traversing the Atlantic.

Whilst the 13 A321XLRs won’t arrive until 2029, Icelandair was able to get its four A321LRs much sooner, with all arriving by the summer of 2025.

Icelandair A321LR

I was one of a handful of international journalists invited to witness the arrival of the first of these, TF-IAA, from a tantalising vantage point next to the runway.

After a very low fly-over in Reykjavik, the aircraft landed through icy rain at Keflavik Airport before ceremoniously taxiing back down the runway.

Icelandair A321LR

Following its arrival, I had the opportunity to step on board and see what Icelandair has in store for its customers.

Ultimately, the A321neo fleet will allow Icelandair to retire the remainder of its ageing Boeing 757s. With a seat count of 187, just three more than the 757, the aircraft type is almost identical but burns 30% less fuel.

A passenger travelling on the A321LR tomorrow will emit only 70% of the emissions of a passenger that travelled on the 757 yesterday – a massive reduction in an industry where even 1% or 2% reductions are given a fanfare.

Icelandair A321LR

On board, Icelandair offers an evolution of its existing cabins. Here, again, it strikes a first with the first installation of Panasonic Avionic’s next generation Astrova inflight entertainment system.

This system will soon be near-ubiquitous as its runaway success means that Panasonic has captured fully 70% of the IFE market for new installations.

Icelandair A321LR

Icelandair’s unique business model in the middle of the Atlantic means it offers a slightly different business class cabin to what you might expect.

With most European flights just three to four hours and flights to the Eastern US just five and a half hours it will continue to offer 2-2 business class seating rather than the lie-flat business class seats you’d find on most transatlantic competitors.

The good news is that this is ‘true’ 2-2 seating and not the ‘blocked middle seat’ you find on other European airlines’ short haul business class cabins. This means proper, large armchairs from Italian manufacturer Geven in the front, similar to what you get on domestic First in the US. It is more akin (but still more spacious, I think) than long haul premium economy.

Icelandair A321LR

The pinch-point comes on longer flights, such as those to Portland, Oregon and Seattle, which can be as long as eight hours. Many would consider this as veering into long haul territory. There will be more on that in my upcoming interview with Icelandair CEO Bogi Nils Bogason.

Icelandair A321LR

The A321LR offers 22 of these Saga Premium seats across five or six rows, depending on which side of the aisle you are on. The 16″ 4K screens from Panasonic’s Astrova line are a notable upgrade; the OLED screens offer deeper blacks and a higher dynamic range.

The real innovation is in the modular peripherals bar, which comes with two USB-C ports capable of a (combined) 67w charging and features physical buttons to turn the screen on and off and adjust the volume, amongst other things. Also inside is a Bluetooth chip so that you can connect your own headphones.

Icelandair A321LR

As a fully modular item, the peripheral bar can be swapped out quickly and easily between flights in case it is broken or – as may be the case in a few years time – technology evolves and we move onto even better Bluetooth and USB standards.

The same is true for the processor and GPU which are in the underseat box. That allows airlines to upgrade tech in a quicker and more cost-effective way and means onerous ‘head injury criteria’ crash tests can be avoided if the screen is unaffected.

This is all invisible for most passengers, of course, but the thin bezels of the screen, as well as its quality, should be fairly obvious. It mirrors what we are all used to when it comes to consumer technology and the latest generation of iPads. For once, tech on board an airplane looks pretty cutting edge.

Behind the Saga Premium cabin come 165 economy seats, including a number of rows with extra legroom. These too get Panasonic’s new Astrova screens, albeit at a smaller 13″ diameter – still impressive in economy.

Icelandair A321LR

At the very rear of the aircraft, Icelandair has opted for a far more spacious galley and lavatory area than the one I saw on Iberia’s A321XLR.

Whilst both airlines have three lavatories for economy class passengers, Icelandair has pushed these further up into the fuselage rather than opt to integrate two into the galleys themselves. This doubles the available space for Icelandair crews and means passengers aren’t crowding out their space when they are preparing a meal service – a problem which is already surfacing on Iberia’s A321XLR services.

Whilst the arrival of the A321neo at Icelandair doesn’t change its business model – it is still committed to recliner business class rather than lie-flat – the bottom line is that it now offers an improved experience for passengers travelling across the Atlantic.

The A321LR will initially ply flights to Stockholm, but it is expected to start flying to the UK with flights to Heathrow already scheduled. Of course, with up to 4,700nm of range it can go a lot further than that and will, eventually, cover many of the cities in its network.

Comments (27)

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

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    Yep, always remember Icelandair is Premium Economy – maybe Premium PE – but not business class.

    • Tom says:

      For the hard product, yes. But the soft product is solid. And at least westbound I do not need lie-flat.

  • memesweeper says:

    The Mercator Projection has a lot to answer for. Greenland is not the same size as Brazil, Brazil is four times larger!

  • John G says:

    Great report as always. Would love to have seen some pics of the economy cabin/seats though.

  • Joe G says:

    Icelandair really need to join some sort of airline alliance, I travel to Iceland a few times a year from central Scotland so a regular but not frequent flyer and might be encouraged to collect Saga points if there was any actual use for them outside of Icelandair.

    As it is I mostly use easyJet as they are generally cheaper and there is no real difference in Economy class. Not too bothered about “Saga class” for a flight of less than 2 hours given the price difference.

    • John says:

      You can use them for on board food

    • memesweeper says:

      credit to Alaskan is possible I think, and presumably redemptions to/from them too… Alaskan have a lot of partners.

  • Ironside says:

    Having never flown transatlantic with a stop at KEF, what is the attraction in doing so?

    Obviously people do do it. Is it simply a lower price which makes it worthwhile changing aircraft when you might otherwise be sleeping?

    • Lumma says:

      Free stopover in Iceland.
      Much shorter than other one stop itineraries.
      Good value fares.

    • TooPoorToBeHere says:

      A mixture of cheapness, and connections. It is cheap, and they have enough regional connections that the flight times are sometimes the most convenient.

      For example if I ask for MAN-BOS on Google Flights on a random day, it’s £20 cheaper than BA and leaves mid-morning rather than requiring getting up at 0400. For a day flight paying cash I might well take that just for the novelty value, never mind the quality-of-life difference from not having broken sleep.

    • Joe G says:

      It must be to do with prices on cash fares as when you fly Icelandair from Glasgow a large proportion of the passengers appear to be from the USA and Canada and have been visiting Scotland.

      From a points perspective I imagine there are a lot more attractive propositions for redemptions or points earning to get to the USA or Canada from the UK as not to make Icelandair an attractive proposition.

      Would be interested if anyone else has a differing view on this though?

      • TooPoorToBeHere says:

        The market mostly isn’t people who know/care/fly enough, to be interested in points.

    • conspicuous-capybara says:

      I know this isn’t a view shared by everyone, but if I’m in the back of the bus, since I’m not going to sleep much anyhow, I’d rather take a, for example, 6 hour flight + 3 hour flight with a chance to stretch my legs between flights than a direct 9 hour flight. I get too fidgety otherwise.

      Same goes for connecting in Doha to S/SE Asia.

      • Michael Jennings says:

        I flew STN-KEF-DIA and back on Play a couple of months back. It was about Easyjet level of comfort and service. Given that, I didn’t mind stopping for an hour or so in the middle of it to stretch my legs, have a decent cup of coffee, check my e-mail etc before continuing.

    • John says:

      You might not be sleeping anyway. Also no need to do security again both ways

  • vlcnc says:

    I am guessing these will likely be put on the new Istanbul route at some point given its length and the new partnership with Turkish Airlines.

    • ADS says:

      yes – BA use their NEOs on their longer shorthaul routes … presumably Icelandair will do something similar

  • Super Secret Stuff says:

    From an operational perspective, I think it’s weird they’ve opted for 4 LRs. As it makes substitutions harder, if the only aircraft they have available is an LR but the range isn’t enough, they’re stuck with a delay. Crew and everything else is transferrable, range isn’t!

    • Rhys says:

      It’s just what they could get their hands on earliest. To be fair, the LR can do a lot of their network, so I can’t see it being a problem. There’s only going to be four of them!

  • felim meade says:

    Just be super careful with Iceland air as ive had awful trouble with them. Ive had 2 instances where they cancelled flights and refused to pay EU261 compensation claiming weather as a factor. I got 2 pilots to double check weather and found that this claim was false. I even took this all the way to the Iceland regulator who refused to take 2 independent weather reports into account and ruled in airlines favor. I toyed with idea of suing but just gave up but its my firm belief that this might be a systematic thing to save money….. Caveat Emptor

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.