Aircraft Orders & Deliveries
Airbus Delivers 793 Aircraft in 2025 Surpassing Revised Targets
Airbus delivered 793 commercial aircraft in 2025, exceeding revised targets amid supply chain challenges and reaching a record backlog of 8,754 jets.

This article is based on an official press release from Airbus.
Airbus Delivers 793 Aircraft in 2025, Surpassing Revised Targets Amid Supply Chain Constraints
Airbus has retained its status as the world’s largest aircraft manufacturer for the seventh consecutive year, reporting 793 commercial aircraft deliveries for 2025. According to the company’s official figures released today, this represents a 4% increase over the 766 aircraft delivered in 2024. The final tally slightly exceeds the manufacturer’s revised guidance of “around 790” aircraft, a target that was adjusted late in the year due to persistent industrial bottlenecks.
In addition to its delivery performance, the European planemaker secured 1,000 gross orders, resulting in 889 net orders after cancellations. This commercial activity has pushed the company’s total backlog to a record high of 8,754 aircraft, signaling robust long-term demand despite a “complex and dynamic operating environment.”
2025 Delivery Performance by Family
The A320 Family continued to serve as the backbone of Airbus’s industrial output, accounting for the vast majority of deliveries. However, the A220 program saw the most significant percentage growth year-over-year.
According to the data released by Airbus, the delivery breakdown by aircraft family is as follows:
- A220 Family: 93 deliveries (up 24% from 75 in 2024)
- A320 Family: 607 deliveries (up 0.8% from 602 in 2024)
- A330 Family: 36 deliveries (up 12.5% from 32 in 2024)
- A350 Family: 57 deliveries (unchanged from 2024)
The figures highlight a stabilization in widebody production, with the A330 seeing a double-digit percentage increase, while the A350 remained flat at 57 units. The A320 Family’s growth was modest, reflecting the intense supply chain pressures affecting single-aisle production lines.
Supply Chain Challenges and Strategic Adjustments
While the 793 deliveries mark a year-on-year improvement, the figure falls short of Airbus’s original 2025 target of 820 aircraft. The company was forced to lower this guidance late in the year. In its statement, Airbus acknowledged the difficulties of the past year, citing a supply chain that remains fragile post-pandemic.
Industry analysis indicates that specific bottlenecks, particularly regarding fuselage components from suppliers, hampered the ability to reach the initial 820-unit goal. A significant “December push”, a traditional year-end surge in aerospace logistics, saw the manufacturer deliver 136 aircraft in the final month alone, allowing it to clear the revised threshold of 790.
Orders and Backlog
Commercial momentum remained strong throughout 2025. Airbus reported a book-to-bill ratio greater than one, meaning it received more orders than it fulfilled. The backlog now stands at 8,754 jets, providing significant visibility for production planning through the end of the decade.
“We delivered 793 commercial aircraft in 2025, an increase of 4% compared to 2024, and we reached a record backlog of 8,754 aircraft.”
Airbus Press Release
Competitive Landscape
Airbus’s performance cements its lead over rival Boeing for another year. While Boeing has not yet released full-year confirmed figures for 2025, data from January through November 2025 showed the US manufacturer at 537 deliveries. Boeing’s production was severely impacted by a machinists’ strike in late 2024 and ongoing regulatory scrutiny following the Alaska Airlines incident earlier in the cycle.
Market analysts estimate that Airbus currently holds approximately 70% of the delivery market share for 2025, a disparity driven largely by the divergent industrial stability of the two aerospace giants.
AirPro News Analysis
The ability of Airbus to meet its revised target of 790 deliveries will likely be viewed by investors as a stabilizing signal. After the disappointment of the guidance downgrade, missing the lower target would have raised serious questions about management’s visibility into its own supply chain. Instead, the delivery of 793 units suggests that while the supply chain is “complex,” it is not broken.
However, the flat performance of the A350 and the marginal growth of the A320 family (less than 1%) indicate that the ramp-up is slower than the market desires. The record backlog is a double-edged sword: it proves demand is insatiable, but it also increases pressure on Airbus to solve component shortages, specifically engines and fuselages, to prevent delivery slots from slipping further into the 2030s.
With the acquisition of key Spirit AeroSystems sites on the horizon, 2026 will likely be a year of vertical integration for Airbus as it attempts to insulate itself from the supplier volatility that defined 2025.
Sources:
Photo Credit: Airbus
Aircraft Orders & Deliveries
CDB Aviation Signs 787-9 Sale Leaseback with Lufthansa
CDB Aviation completes its first direct lease with Lufthansa Airlines, covering two Boeing 787-9s with Allegris cabins.

CDB Aviation has executed a sale and leaseback agreement with Lufthansa Airlines for two Boeing 787-9 aircraft, marking the Irish lessor’s first direct leasing transaction with the German flag carrier.
Announced in a company press release on July 1, 2026, the transaction involves widebody aircraft delivered to Lufthansa in late 2025 and early 2026. The deal expands CDB Aviation, a wholly owned subsidiary of China Development Bank Financial Leasing Co., Ltd., into a direct relationship with a top-tier European credit while adding new-technology assets to its portfolio.
Transaction details and delivery timeline
The two Boeing 787-9s involved in the agreement feature Lufthansa’s new Allegris cabin configuration. The lessor is acquiring the aircraft specifically from Lufthansa Asset Management Leasing GmbH, the airline’s dedicated asset management entity.
The leaseback arrangement, structured under operating leases, is expected to close by mid-July 2026. This timeline aligns with CDB Aviation’s broader strategy to grow its aviation leasing assets under Hong Kong listing rules, securing long-term placements for highly liquid aircraft types.
Expanding the Lufthansa Group relationship
While this agreement represents the first direct aircraft lease between CDB Aviation and Lufthansa Airlines, the lessor has an established history with the broader corporate group. CDB Aviation previously executed aircraft sales to Lufthansa Group sister carriers Austrian Airlines and Eurowings, and has also conducted business with Lufthansa’s engine leasing division.
Gavan Daly, Head of Commercial for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa at CDB Aviation, highlighted the strategic value of formalizing a direct lease with the mainline carrier.
“This sale and leaseback agreement with Lufthansa represents a key transaction for CDB Aviation, as we continue to grow the portfolio with top-tier credits and new technology, liquid assets.”
AirPro News analysis
We view this transaction as a standard but strategic portfolio enhancement for CDB Aviation, aligning with the broader industry trend of lessors targeting highly liquid, new-generation widebody aircraft. Securing a direct lease with Lufthansa Airlines diversifies the lessor’s European footprint while providing the airline with capital flexibility following its recent fleet modernization investments. The Boeing 787-9 remains a highly sought-after asset in the secondary market, minimizing residual value risk for the lessor over the life of the operating lease.
Sources: CDB Aviation
Photo Credit: Lufthansa Group
Aircraft Orders & Deliveries
BOC Aviation Signs A350-1000 Leaseback Deal With Qatar Airways
BOC Aviation finalizes a purchase and leaseback of three Airbus A350-1000s with Qatar Airways, its first financing of the type for the carrier.

BOC Aviation Limited has finalized a purchase and leaseback agreement with Qatar Airways for three Airbus A350-1000 aircraft, marking the lessor’s first financing of the widebody type for the Doha-based carrier.
Announced in a press release on June 30, 2026, the transaction involves aircraft that were originally delivered to the airline in late 2025. The long-term operating leases expand BOC Aviation’s widebody portfolio while providing liquidity to Qatar Airways as the airline continues its network restoration efforts.
Transaction details and fleet integration
The three Airbus A350-1000 aircraft are powered by Rolls-Royce Trent XWB-97 engines. According to a regulatory filing with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx), the formal agreement was executed on June 29, 2026.
BOC Aviation Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Steven Townend highlighted the strategic nature of the deal.
“We deliberately strengthened our liquidity position earlier this year with transactions of this quality in mind and we are delighted to deploy that capacity in support of one of our largest and most valued customers,” Townend stated.
The lessor noted that this agreement builds on a long-standing partnership with Qatar Airways. As of March 31, 2026, BOC Aviation reported a portfolio of 813 owned, managed, and on-order aircraft and engines, leased to 88 airlines globally.
Qatar Airways operational context
The leaseback arrangement follows a period of executive restructuring and operational recovery for Qatar Airways. On June 18, 2026, the airline reported that its network had been restored to 85 percent of pre-crisis levels.
The carrier, which operates an active fleet of approximately 230 aircraft, also recently created two new executive roles to focus on operations and customer experience. According to reporting by Aviation Week, this follows a sudden leadership transition in December 2025, when Hamad Ali Al-Khater was appointed Group Chief Executive Officer, succeeding Badr Mohammed Al-Meer.
AirPro News analysis
We view this purchase and leaseback agreement as a standard capital management maneuver for Qatar Airways, allowing the carrier to free up balance sheet liquidity tied up in its late-2025 widebody deliveries. For BOC Aviation, securing three high-value Airbus A350-1000 assets on long-term leases with a premium Gulf carrier aligns with the lessor’s stated strategy of deploying its strengthened capital reserves into low-risk, high-yield widebody assets. The transaction underscores the ongoing reliance of major network carriers on the sale-and-leaseback market to optimize capital structures during periods of network expansion.
Sources: BOC Aviation
Photo Credit: Airbus
Aircraft Orders & Deliveries
Air Peace Takes Delivery of First Embraer E175 in 2026
Air Peace received its first Embraer E175 on June 30, 2026, targeting unserved intra-African routes identified in Embraer’s 2026 connectivity report.

Nigerian carrier Air Peace took delivery of its first factory-new Embraer E175 on June 30, 2026, marking a strategic fleet expansion aimed at capturing underserved regional routes across West and Central Africa.
The handover, announced in a press release by Embraer from its São José dos Campos facility in Brazil, introduces the regional jet to an existing fleet that includes the larger Embraer E195-E2, the smaller ERJ145, and Boeing 777 widebodies. The delivery aligns with a documented gap in intra-African connectivity, which the manufacturer notes has widened over the past year.
Fleet optimization and order adjustments
The arrival of the E175 follows a series of strategic adjustments to the airline’s order book. According to ch-aviation, Air Peace originally placed a firm order for five E175 aircraft on September 14, 2023. The airline subsequently modified its capacity requirements on July 29, 2025, converting three of those airframes to the larger E195-E2 model while retaining two E175s on firm backlog.
The addition of the E175 provides the carrier with a right-sized asset for thinner routes. Dr. Allen Onyema, Chairman and CEO of Air Peace, stated in the Embraer release that the aircraft will increase operational flexibility and market reach as the airline strengthens its leadership position in the region.
Addressing the intra-African connectivity gap
The deployment of the E175 targets specific network expansion goals. Aviation Week reported that the airline intends to use the new aircraft to boost frequencies on established domestic sectors and introduce flights to four new destinations across the continent.
This expansion strategy corresponds with data from Embraer’s African Connectivity Report 2026. The manufacturer identified 55 intra-African city pairs currently lacking direct air services, representing an increase from 45 unserved pairs in 2025.
“This delivery highlights the continued demand for right-sized aircraft, with airlines seeking to expand connectivity while maintaining high levels of efficiency and service,” said Arjan Meijer, President and CEO of Embraer Commercial Aviation.
AirPro News analysis
We view the integration of the E175 into the Air Peace fleet as a pragmatic approach to the unique challenges of the West African aviation market. By operating a mixed fleet of ERJ145s, E175s, and E195-E2s, the airline can closely match capacity to fluctuating demand on regional sectors without incurring the higher trip costs of larger narrowbody aircraft. The 2025 decision to upgauge three E175 orders to E195-E2s suggests the carrier is experiencing robust growth on trunk routes, while the retention of the E175s ensures it maintains the capability to pioneer new, thinner city pairs across the continent.
Sources: Embraer
Photo Credit: Embraer
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