Airbus A220

0 parts applicable to this airframe — narrowbody

No parts found.

Utilization & cargo trend(US carriers, 2015–2025)

A220 family rollup — BTS T-100, domestic + international

Cycles per aircraft
1,0562025
2015: no data2016: no data2017: no data2018: no data2019: 435 cycles/aircraft2020: 452 cycles/aircraft2021: 703 cycles/aircraft2022: 942 cycles/aircraft2023: 934 cycles/aircraft2024: 924 cycles/aircraft2025: 1,056 cycles/aircraft
20152025
2020: 452
Recovered to 212% of 2019 (2024 vs 2019)
Freighter share of departures
0%0%20192025
2015: no data2016: no data2017: no data2018: no data2019: 0% freighter share2020: 0% freighter share2021: 0% freighter share2022: 0% freighter share2023: 0% freighter share2024: 0% freighter share2025: 0% freighter share
20152025
Est. US-registered fleet
1982025
20152025

US carriers only (BTS T-100, domestic + international segments) — foreign-carrier flying is excluded, so global utilization runs higher. Fleet size is reconstructed from the FAA registry (built on or before each year, not yet deregistered) — an approximation. Freighter share counts departures with zero passengers and freight aboard — a proxy for freighter/combi operations, not a tail-by-tail conversion count. Missing years render as gaps.

Engine-program supply pressure(since 2023)

FAA registry — US-registered fleet

Engines account for roughly half of all MRO spend, so engine programs shedding aircraft are where retirement supply carries the most value.

Engine modelActive tailsEngine unitsRetired since ’23ExportedAvg age at dereg
P & W PW1521G SERIE9719400
P & W PW1524G SERIE5811600
P & W PW1519G377400
P & W PW1500G series61200

FAA registry data, US-registered aircraft only. Counts reflect the engine model as registered — generic “series” rows coexist with thrust-variant rows, so per-variant figures are partial. Retired = domestic deregistrations (a teardown proxy, not a confirmed part-out); exported aircraft left the US fleet intact. Active tails span every family the engine flies on, not just this one.

Maintenance economics(US carriers, through 2026)

A220 family — BTS Form 41 filings

Direct maintenance per block hour
$242fleet avg
Airframe / engine split
$123/$119
Reporting carriers
3
Carrier range
$108$284

BTS Form 41 data (Schedule P-5.2 maintenance expense over T-2 block hours), Group III US carriers only — filers above $1B annual revenue; smaller US operators, Part 135, and all non-US carriers are not in this data. Dollars are accrual-basis from regulatory filings (reserves and depreciation included), so they benchmark fleet economics and do not track to individual repair events. Averages are block-hour- weighted across every reporting carrier; the range spans per-carrier rates after excluding marginal reporting slices, and small carrier counts are noisy.