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Airbus Surpasses Revised Delivery Target but Total Remains Under 800

Airbus Surpasses Revised Delivery Target but Annual Total Remains Below 800
Airbus delivered 793 commercial aircraft in 2025, slightly exceeding its revised annual target of approximately 790 units. This adjustment followed the company’s decision to lower its original goal of around 820 deliveries due to quality concerns involving metal panels on its A320 jets. Although Airbus surpassed the adjusted target, the total deliveries remain below both pre-pandemic levels and earlier projections.
Delivery Performance and Order Activity
The full-year data released by Airbus reveals that 136 aircraft were delivered in December alone, contributing significantly to the annual total. Of the 793 aircraft delivered throughout the year, 700 were single-aisle jets, including 607 from the A320neo family and 93 A220s. Widebody deliveries comprised 57 A350s and 36 A330s. This output marks an improvement over the 766 deliveries recorded in 2024 but still falls short of the 831 aircraft delivered in 2018 and the record 863 in 2019.
In terms of orders, Airbus reported strong demand, securing exactly 1,000 gross orders in 2025. After cancellations, the net total stood at 889 aircraft. The company’s backlog at the end of the year reached 8,754 aircraft, with 1,124 widebody models included.
Christian Scherer, chief executive of Airbus’s commercial aircraft division, acknowledged the ongoing challenges but emphasized that the company’s production ramp-up “continues to move in the right direction.”
December Order Highlights
December witnessed a surge in order activity, with Airbus finalizing agreements for 36 A350 aircraft. These included 20 A350-900s for Spanish carrier Air Europa, six for Ethiopian Airlines, and five A350-1000s for China Airlines. Additional undisclosed customers placed orders for five A350-900s and four A330-900s.
Single-aisle orders were led by Air China’s acquisition of 60 A321neos, while Hong Kong lessor CALC ordered 30 A320neos. Qantas confirmed an order for 20 A321neos, and four undisclosed customers collectively signed for 42 A320neo-family jets, with one customer accounting for 35 of these. Another undisclosed buyer ordered nine A220-300s. Airbus also revealed that American Airlines was behind four previously undisclosed orders from the previous year, totaling eight A321neos.
Airbus is scheduled to release its audited year-end commercial data on January 12, 2026.

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