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British Airways goes aircraft shopping – orders 44 more Boeing and Airbus planes

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Last night, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick teased a $10 billion order for Boeing planes from an unnamed “British airline”.

You didn’t need a crystal ball to predict that this would be for British Airways. 18 months ago, 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.

I wrote an article at the time – which I will largely reproduce below – looking at why BA needed more widebody aircraft.

British Airways orders 44 more Boeing and Airbus planes

Although it’s taken 18 months to come to fruition (which should give you an idea of how long these negotiations last ….) IAG has finally announced several new orders:

  • 32 Boeing 787-10 planes destined for British Airways, for delivery between 2028 and 2033
  • 21 Airbus A330-900neo planes for Aer Lingus, Iberia and/or LEVEL
  • 6 Airbus A350-900s for Iberia
  • 6 Airbus A350-1000s for British Airways
  • 6 Boeing 777-9X for British Airways

IAG also holds options over 10 more Boeing 787-10s and 13 more A330neos should it wish to exercise these.

In total, this means that British Airways now has 44 additional widebody aircraft in its order book.

I won’t focus too much on the A330neo order, except to say that it is a win for Airbus. The above airlines already fly the older A330 so Airbus is keeping it in the family. I believe British Airways is the only airline at IAG to operate Boeing aircraft, and it looks like that will continue, at least until the first of 50 737MAX arrive in a few years.

BA’s fleet before and after covid

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 retired. With BA’s Boeing 777-200ER fleet nearing an average age of 25 years (some are turning 29 soon) it was only a matter of time.

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

  • 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. This single handedly wiped out 23% of the 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 orders 44 more Boeing and Airbus planes

Since then, the long haul fleet has recovered slightly with the arrival of further A350s and 787-10s. Fundamentally, however, British Airways remains a smaller airline than it was in early 2020 with just 122 aircraft as of May 2025:

  • 43 Boeing 777-200ER
  • 16 Boeing 777-300ER
  • 12 Boeing 787-8 (214 seats)
  • 16 Boeing 787-9 (216 seats)
  • 11 787-10 (256 seats)
  • 12 A380 (469 seats)
  • 18 Airbus A350-1000 (331 seats)

Still to arrive are seven more 787-10s (from previous orders). Already on order are 18 Boeing 777-9X, the next generation 777, which are now due to arrive no earlier than 2027.

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 next year; 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 seven 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 a few years ago, so they still have a good 10-15 years in them if BA is prepared to spend on maintenance and cabin upgrades.

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

British Airways orders 44 more Boeing and Airbus planes

What’s on the menu, British Airways?

The original Bloomberg story from 2023 suggested IAG would order at least 20 aircraft, but it appears BA’s appetite is even larger, for 38 Boeing planes and six Airbus A350s.

This should allow it to make a significant dent in replacing its ageing 777-200 fleet but also opens the door to potential A380 retirements down the line thanks to the larger Boeing 777-9X, now the largest commercial jet in production.

(Without a third runway at Heathrow, any expansion is challenging and there is little room for growth at this stage, apart from at Gatwick and elsewhere.)

As we saw with the 2023 top-up order for six 787-10s, the latest batch comes with General Electric, rather than Rolls-Royce, engines. This is due to IAG’s dissatisfaction with the performance of the Trent 1000s from Rolls-Royce which have had high-profile problems – although they are, finally, coming to an end.

It will mean British Airways operating a split fleet, with 12 aircraft with Rolls-Royce engines and 38 with GE. That said, BA has operated split-fleets before so this is nothing new for them.

The A350-1000 order is more interesting, as many people thought British Airways might end up with an orphaned fleet of just 18. BA’s strategy so far seems to be to use these on longer routes with no demand for First Class, which will remain exclusive to the Boeing 787-9, 787-10, 777 and A380s. Topping this up to 24 should add some fleet flexibility.

Conclusion

It’s good to see IAG finally announce its long-term fleet plans for British Airways. We’ve long known that something had to be done and the latest orders will finally allow BA to retire some of its oldest aircraft.

IAG says the order for the Boeing 787-10s will arrive between 2028 and 2033, whilst the order for A350-1000s and Boeing 777Xs will arrive a bit earlier – between 2027 and 2030. The Boeing 777X will likely arrive towards the latter part of the decade given that it still hasn’t entered commercial service.

Comments (68)

  • Tim says:

    Howard Nut-Lick

  • Nnaeto says:

    Excellent Order. Indicates why BA continues to out manoeuvre the competition. They hone in on aircraft that maximise profitability on every route. On sub 12 hour flights you’re not beating a -10s economics which is why BA have now invested heavily in that frame. BAs long haul network is probably 90% sub 12 hours

    • RC says:

      That’s a matter of debate. Clearly airlines that order 330neo disagree. Lower ownership costs matter abd tgat favours Airbus. Airbus also carry less risk of being grounded or being very late delivery due to quality issues.
      Odd to see some posts here that think the 787-10 is very range limited. It isn’t – look at what eva get out of it. The BA issue isn’t the plane, it’s BA’s choice not to install crew rest areas.
      As usual, BA being short term bean counters has costs for the future . Just like the galley and toilet problems on the A350s and 321NEO in BA’s version.

      • Rhys says:

        BA already realised their mistake and the last top up order from 2023 was coming with crew rest and I imagine these will be too.

        • Paul says:

          Top up order is also the new IGW varient making crew bunks more useful.
          I don’t think you can order the original non-IGW variant anymore.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      How exactly has IAG managed to “out manoeuvre the competition’ with this order?

      They don’t place multi billion pound orders for planes as some sort of game to stop other airlines getting them.

      Plane manufacturers will take any and all the orders they can.

      • Nnaeto says:

        It’s not about placing orders. The order has a bit of everything. BA focus is less on fleet commonality and more on different size of aircraft that will allow supply to meet demand where it is. Some airlines like Air France for example will retire 787s and focus largely on the 350-900, little less 1000s, that’s very risk averse, the 350-900 won’t maximise profit on the routes where a different frame can extract more profit it will however make a lot of money and you’d struggle to lose money on a frame like that it’s very efficient. Where as BA will buy 787s, 350s, 777x because they can utilise them well across their route network to maximise yield and attract the most profit out of every single route

  • strickers says:

    I think the GEnx engine produces more thrust than the Trent 1000 on the -10. I wonder if Boeing will use this to try to increase the MTOW slightly?

  • Alex says:

    Why should we care ? It kind of discuss what engine fuel they use 🙂 what is important are routes and prices

  • Andrew says:

    Shame they don’t buy more Airbus. I know there’s some UK content in Boeings but presumably there’s more in Airbus.

    And shame they use GE engines though my RR shares are doing very nicely. (As are my IAG shares – still considerably undervalued by general consent)

  • T says:

    I would have liked more Airbus a350s

    Boeing is for accountants…

  • Colin says:

    I am not an airline/aircraft ‘nerd’ more politics and economics. Undoubtedly the government and the White House would have known if this before this week’s announcement of a UK/US trade deal – would have helped grease the wheels.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Not sure the order greased any wheels.

      The IAG order wasn’t predicated on the trade deal being signed (which has been several years in the making) and the trade deal wasn’t predicated on the plane order.

      True announcements like this can be coordinated to a degree but the two are still separate and distinct.

  • Garethgerry says:

    I don’t like BA 787-10 lay out, only 2 toilets for business most of time.

    I also find airbus quieter, and British wings …

    But perhaps Boeing were offering good deals given loss of China orders.

    • Nnaeto says:

      China has nothing to do with it as this order has been in negotiations for 18 months.

      The 787-10 is just better for BAs route network, not sure why a lot of people find that difficult to believe

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