Newest Commercial Aircraft in Service
A new generation of commercial aircraft is rolling out simultaneously. The Airbus A321XLR has opened thin transatlantic routes for narrowbodies, the Boeing 777-9 is finally close to its first commercial flight after multiple certification slips, and the COMAC C919 has put a non-Western narrowbody into commercial service for the first time. Fuel efficiency, post-737 MAX certification scrutiny, and new ETOPS rules are all reshaping the fleet, and the next five years of EIS dates are unusually packed.
Most Recent Entries Into Service
These aircraft entered commercial service over the past five to seven years and are still considered new-generation types. EIS dates reflect the launch operator's first revenue flight, not first delivery or certification.
| Aircraft | EIS |
|---|---|
Airbus A321XLR Airbus In service | Nov 2024 |
COMAC C919 COMAC In service | May 2023 |
Embraer E195-E2 Embraer In service | Sep 2019 |
Embraer E190-E2 Embraer In service | Apr 2018 |
Airbus A330-900neo Airbus In service | Dec 2018 |
Boeing 787-10 Boeing In service | Apr 2018 |
Airbus A350-1000 Airbus In service | Feb 2018 |
Airbus A220-300 Airbus In service | Dec 2016 |
Currently Entering Service in 2025-2026
Two long-awaited Boeing programs are finally arriving. Both have been delayed from their original timelines by certification work that intensified after the 737 MAX grounding.
| Aircraft | EIS |
|---|---|
Boeing 777-9 (777X) Boeing Entering service | 2026 |
Boeing 737 MAX 10 Boeing Entering service | 2025-2026 |
Under Development
These aircraft have not yet entered commercial service. Target EIS dates from manufacturers tend to slip; treat anything past 2027 as aspirational.
| Aircraft | EIS |
|---|---|
Boeing 777-8 Boeing In development | 2027+ |
Airbus A350F Airbus In development | 2027 |
COMAC C929 COMAC In development | 2030+ |
Boom Overture Boom In development | 2029+ |
Heart ES-30 Heart Aerospace In development | 2028+ |
Eviation Alice Eviation In development | TBD |
Airbus A220-500 Airbus In development | Not launched |
Why Is the 777-9 So Delayed?
Boeing first flew the 777-9 in January 2020 and originally targeted EIS in late 2020. Six years later it still has not carried a paying passenger. Three things drove the slip: post-737 MAX FAA scrutiny that reset the certification baseline for every Boeing program; a pause to re-engineer the folding wingtip locking mechanism; and durability problems with the General Electric GE9X engine, the largest commercial turbofan ever built, including issues with the high-pressure compressor stator and combustor.
Lufthansa is now the launch operator, with first commercial service expected in 2026. Emirates, Qatar, ANA, and Cathay Pacific are also major customers awaiting deliveries.
What About Supersonic and Electric?
Three projects get the most attention. Boom Overture targets Mach 1.7 with a 64-80 seat cabin and 4,250 nm range; United and American Airlines have placed orders. The XB-1 subscale demonstrator broke the sound barrier in 2025, but Boom is now designing its own Symphony engine after Rolls-Royce withdrew, which makes the 2029 EIS target ambitious.
Heart Aerospace ES-30 is a 30-seat hybrid-electric regional aircraft with about 200 km of pure-battery range and longer reach on its reserve generators. United and Air Canada are launch customers targeting 2028+.
Eviation Alice is the most mature all-electric design, with a first flight in September 2022, but its commercial EIS has been pushed multiple times and remains unannounced. Battery energy-density limits will keep electric commercial flight on routes under 250 nm for the foreseeable future.
How Airlines Decide Which New Aircraft to Buy
New aircraft purchases are driven by five overlapping factors: fuel efficiency (the biggest single operating cost), range (does it open new routes the current fleet can't fly), capacity match (oversized aircraft on weak routes destroy yields), slot constraints at congested hubs (a slot at LHR is far more valuable than the incremental seat cost), and fleet commonality (training, spares, and maintenance overhead scale with type diversity).
The A321XLR is selling well because it satisfies four of those at once: 30%+ better fuel burn than the 757 it replaces, 4,700 nm range that opens transatlantic markets, narrowbody capacity that matches thin routes, and commonality with existing A320 fleets. The 777-9 is the opposite case: a slot-defender for hubs like DXB and LHR where an airline needs the largest possible aircraft per slot.
Notes on Each Aircraft
Longest-range single-aisle ever. Entered service Nov 2024 on Iberia Madrid-Boston, opening thin transatlantic routes for narrowbodies.
China's first indigenous narrowbody. Western certification still pending; sales remain mostly domestic. Direct competitor to A320/737 family.
Stretched E2 variant. Lowest fuel burn per seat of any single-aisle in its class according to Embraer.
First of the E2 family. New wing, new engines, new avionics on a familiar regional airframe.
Re-engined A330 with sharklets and Trent 7000s. Operated by Delta, TAP, Air France, Aircalin, Hi Fly.
Largest Dreamliner. Length-restricted by tail-strike geometry, so it trades range for capacity.
Stretched A350. Modern twin replacement for the 777-300ER on premium long-haul routes.
Originally Bombardier C-Series. Now built in Mirabel and Mobile. Operated by Delta, JetBlue, Air France, Breeze.
Longest passenger jet ever at 76.7m. First flight Jan 2020; certification slipped multiple times. First commercial flight expected 2026 with Lufthansa.
Largest MAX variant. Certification work continued through 2025 after the post-MAX FAA scrutiny reset the timeline. Major orders from United, Delta, Ryanair.
Long-range 777X variant. Replaces the 777-200LR on ultra-long-haul routes. EIS follows the 777-9.
A350-based freighter. First widebody freighter built around composites. ICAO 2027 emissions standard compliant from day one.
China's twin-aisle widebody. First flight not yet completed. Russia exited the joint program in 2023.
Mach 1.7 supersonic. Subscale XB-1 demonstrator broke the sound barrier in 2025. Production aircraft still designing its own engines after Rolls-Royce withdrew.
Hybrid-electric regional. 200km on battery alone, extended range on reserve generators. Targeting short Scandinavian and US regional hops.
All-electric commuter. First flight Sep 2022. Certification timeline pushed multiple times; commercial EIS not yet announced.
Proposed stretch of the A220-300. Not formally launched as of 2026. Would compete directly with the 737 MAX 8 and A320neo.
Sources
- Boeing commercial program updates and press releases (boeing.com/commercial)
- Airbus aircraft family pages and press centre (airbus.com)
- Embraer commercial aviation program updates (embraercommercialaviation.com)
- COMAC press releases and CAAC certification announcements
- Aviation Week — 777X program coverage, GE9X engine reporting
- FlightGlobal — A321XLR EIS reporting, ES-30 and Overture program tracking
- FAA and EASA type certificate data sheets