Etihad Airways will bring two more of its Airbus A380 superjumbos back into service as airlines worldwide struggle with aircraft shortages and persistent supply chain bottlenecks.
The Abu Dhabi-based carrier currently operates seven of its 10 A380s and plans to return its eighth to the skies on June 15, 2026, followed by the ninth on January 1, 2027, the airline told The National. The tenth aircraft has been permanently decommissioned for spare parts.
The move comes as global carriers face mounting delays from aircraft manufacturers Boeing and Airbus, whose production backlogs have reached record highs. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) reported that the worldwide commercial aircraft backlog climbed to over 17,000 jets in 2024, up from an average of around 13,000 annually between 2010 and 2019.
These delays have constrained airlines’ ability to expand capacity despite surging passenger demand. According to IATA, Middle East carriers saw an 8.2% year-on-year increase in travel demand in August, outpacing the 4.6% global growth. However, capacity growth lagged behind at 6.9%, pushing the region’s load factor to 83.9%, compared with the global average of 86%.
The bottlenecks are also taking a financial toll. A joint report by IATA and consultancy Oliver Wyman estimates that aircraft and parts shortages will cost airlines more than $11 billion in 2025. “Challenges within the aerospace industry’s supply chain are delaying production of new aircraft and parts, resulting in airlines re-evaluating their fleet plans and, in many cases, keeping older aircraft flying for extended amounts of time,” the report noted.
To mitigate the effects of these disruptions, Etihad Airways has turned to leasing additional narrow-body jets, refurbishing older wide-body aircraft, and reactivating more A380s. The airline currently flies the double-decker superjumbo to London, Toronto, Paris, and Singapore.
Etihad’s A380s feature the airline’s signature “Residence in the Sky” — a three-room suite with a private bedroom, en suite shower, and living area with a personal butler — alongside first-class apartments and business studios.
In the first nine months of 2025, Etihad carried 16.1 million passengers, an 18% increase compared with the same period last year. Its operating fleet reached 115 aircraft, serving 82 destinations worldwide. In September 2025 alone, the airline transported 1.9 million passengers, up 21% year-on-year.
“September delivered another strong month for Etihad, with demand remaining high as we entered the post-summer period,” said Antonoaldo Neves, Etihad Airways’ chief executive. “We’re expanding with discipline, keeping our load factors high and operations reliable.”
The airline continues to broaden its global footprint, announcing four new routes in October alone — to Sumatra, Phnom Penh, Addis Ababa, and Krabi. Etihad plans to launch services to Kabul in December, followed by Damascus, Palma de Mallorca, and Zanzibar in the first half of 2026.