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Largest Airline Fleets in the World

Fleet size is one of the cleanest ways to measure scale in commercial aviation, but the top of the list depends on what you count. American, Delta and United dominate the mainline passenger ranking — each operating close to or above 900 jets. Some carriers prefer a single-type fleet for operational simplicity (Southwest with the 737, Ryanair with the 737, Wizz Air with the A320 family); others build sprawling, multi-type fleets to fit every route. And once you include cargo, FedEx — with roughly 700+ jets — has the largest aircraft fleet of any operator on the planet.

~990
Largest mainline fleet
~810
Largest single-type fleet
~990
FedEx + UPS combined
20
Airlines ranked

The Top 3 Passenger Mainline Fleets

1United States

American Airlines

~960
mainline aircraft
Strategy
Many types
Top type
Boeing 737

Largest mainline passenger fleet in the world. Operates 737s, A319/320/321, 787, 777 and the last US passenger 777-200ERs.

2United States

Delta Air Lines

~990
mainline aircraft
Strategy
Many types
Top type
Airbus A321

Often cited as #1 depending on count method. Most diverse mainline fleet of any major US carrier — still flies 717s, 757s and 767s alongside A220 and A350.

3United States

United Airlines

~880
mainline aircraft
Strategy
Many types
Top type
Boeing 737

Largest 787 operator and largest 777 operator in the US. Massive widebody order book through 2030.

Full Top 20 Ranking

1
American Airlines
United States - Oneworld
~960
Strategy Many types
Top Boeing 737

Largest mainline passenger fleet in the world. Operates 737s, A319/320/321, 787, 777 and the last US passenger 777-200ERs.

2
Delta Air Lines
United States - SkyTeam
~990
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A321

Often cited as #1 depending on count method. Most diverse mainline fleet of any major US carrier — still flies 717s, 757s and 767s alongside A220 and A350.

3
United Airlines
United States - Star Alliance
~880
Strategy Many types
Top Boeing 737

Largest 787 operator and largest 777 operator in the US. Massive widebody order book through 2030.

4
Southwest Airlines
United States - None
~810
Strategy Single-type
Top Boeing 737

Largest single-type fleet in commercial aviation. Every aircraft is a 737 — common type rating, common parts, simpler scheduling.

5
Lufthansa GroupGroup
Germany - Star Alliance
~700
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A320 family

Group total across Lufthansa, SWISS, Austrian, Brussels Airlines, Eurowings, Discover and Lufthansa Cityline.

6
China Southern Airlines
China - None (left SkyTeam 2019)
~600
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A320 family

Largest carrier in Asia by fleet size. Widebody mix includes A380, A350, 787, 777.

7
IAG GroupGroup
Spain / United Kingdom - Oneworld
~600
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A320 family

Holding company for British Airways, Iberia, Vueling, Aer Lingus and LEVEL. Combined fleet rivals the largest European groups.

8
China Eastern Airlines
China - SkyTeam
~570
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A320 family

Launch operator of the COMAC C919, slowly displacing some narrowbody capacity from Airbus and Boeing.

9
Ryanair
Ireland - None
~570
Strategy Single-type
Top Boeing 737

Largest 737 operator outside North America. A near-pure single-type fleet (a small batch of A320s sit at Lauda).

10
Air France-KLMGroup
France / Netherlands - SkyTeam
~550
Strategy Many types
Top Boeing 737 / Airbus A320 family

Group total across Air France, KLM, Transavia and HOP. Air France leans Airbus, KLM leans Boeing.

11
Air China
China - Star Alliance
~480
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A320 family

Flag carrier of the People's Republic of China. Smaller than China Southern and China Eastern but with the most premium long-haul network.

12
Turkish Airlines
Turkey - Star Alliance
~440
Strategy Many types
Top Boeing 737

Flies to more countries than any other airline. Aggressive widebody growth out of Istanbul Airport.

13
IndiGo
India - None
~390
Strategy Few types
Top Airbus A320 family

Largest airline in India. Predominantly A320neo / A321neo with a small ATR fleet and incoming A321XLR widebodies.

14
Air Canada
Canada - Star Alliance
~370
Strategy Many types
Top Airbus A320 family

Includes Air Canada Rouge. Diverse widebody fleet with 777, 787 and A330.

15
easyJet
United Kingdom - None
~340
Strategy Single-type
Top Airbus A320 family

All-Airbus narrowbody fleet across A319, A320 and A321neo. Europe's second largest LCC after Ryanair.

16
Alaska Airlines
United States - Oneworld
~330
Strategy Few types
Top Boeing 737

Combined fleet now includes Hawaiian's A330 and 787 widebodies after the 2024 merger.

17
Qantas GroupGroup
Australia - Oneworld
~310
Strategy Many types
Top Boeing 737

Group total across Qantas, Jetstar, QantasLink and Network Aviation.

18
JetBlue Airways
United States - None
~290
Strategy Few types
Top Airbus A320 family

Almost entirely Airbus narrowbody (A220, A320, A321) plus a handful of E190s phasing out.

19
Emirates
United Arab Emirates - None
~260
Strategy Few types
Top Boeing 777

Largest A380 operator in the world and largest 777 operator. Just two aircraft types — the most concentrated widebody fleet anywhere.

20
Wizz Air
Hungary - None
~210
Strategy Single-type
Top Airbus A320 family

Pure Airbus A320neo / A321neo / A321XLR LCC. One of the youngest fleets in Europe.

Cargo vs Passenger

If you include cargo carriers, the rankings flip. FedEx Express alone operates roughly 700+ jets — more than any passenger airline on Earth — and runs the world’s largest 757F and 767F fleets. UPS Airlines follows with around 290 aircraft. Together they account for about ~990 aircraft, more than United Airlines’ entire mainline fleet.

FedEx Express~700
Largest aircraft fleet in the world by any measure when cargo is included. 700+ jets plus turboprop feeders.
UPS Airlines~290
Second largest cargo fleet globally. Hub-and-spoke operations centered on Worldport in Louisville.

Single-Fleet vs Multi-Fleet Strategies

A single-type fleet is one of the highest-leverage operational decisions an airline can make. Pilots only need one type rating, mechanics only stock one parts catalogue, and any aircraft can fly any route. Southwest has built its 50-year cost advantage on a 737-only fleet. Ryanair, Wizz Air and easyJet run the same playbook in Europe.

The trade-off is route flexibility. American, Delta and United fly thin transatlantic routes with 757s, dense hub-to-hub trunks with 777s and 787s, and short shuttles with regional jets — none of which a single 737 can economically cover. Multi-type fleets are more expensive to maintain but they let an airline fly profitably from a 50-seat regional gate to a 350-seat widebody route without leaving demand on the table.

Emirates is the interesting outlier. Its entire fleet of ~260 aircraft is two types — the Airbus A380 and Boeing 777. That gives it Southwest-style commonality on a long-haul widebody network, which is rare anywhere in the world.

Largest Single-Type Fleets

Southwest - Boeing 737 only~810
Ryanair - Boeing 737 (mainline)~570
easyJet - Airbus A320 family only~340
Wizz Air - Airbus A320 family only~210
Emirates - A380 + 777 only (two types)~260

Largest Airlines by Region

North America

  1. 1. American Airlines~960
  2. 2. Delta Air Lines~990
  3. 3. United Airlines~880

Europe

  1. 1. Lufthansa Group~700
  2. 2. IAG Group~600
  3. 3. Ryanair~570

Asia

  1. 1. China Southern Airlines~600
  2. 2. China Eastern Airlines~570
  3. 3. Air China~480

Middle East

  1. 1. Emirates~260

India

  1. 1. IndiGo~390

Oceania

  1. 1. Qantas Group~310

A Note on Methodology

Counts cover mainline aircraft only. Regional feeders that operate under a mainline brand (American Eagle, Delta Connection, United Express, Air France HOP) are flown by separate carriers under capacity purchase agreements and are not counted toward the parent airline’s fleet here. For airline groups (Lufthansa Group, IAG, Air France-KLM, Qantas Group) we list the consolidated total because the parent owns and finances the aircraft across all subsidiaries.

All figures are approximate (~) and drift week-to-week as aircraft are delivered, retired, or temporarily grounded. Numbers are sourced from each airline’s Wikipedia fleet page, Planespotters.net registration databases, ch-aviation, and operator press releases as of late 2025 / early 2026.

Sources & Citations

  • Wikipedia airline fleet pages (American Airlines fleet, Delta fleet, United fleet, Southwest fleet, etc.)
  • Planespotters.net operator registration databases
  • ch-aviation operator profiles
  • Investor relations and press releases from individual carriers and groups (Lufthansa Group, IAG, AF-KLM, Qantas)
  • FedEx and UPS annual reports for cargo fleet totals