Airbus A321neo
The Airbus A321neo is a single-aisle airliner created by Airbus. The A321neo (neo being Greek for "new", as well as an acronym for "new engine option") is developed from the Airbus A321 and Airbus A320neo family. It is the longest stretched fuselage of Airbus's A320 series, and the newest version of the A321, with the original A321ceo entering service in 1994 with Lufthansa. It typically seats 180 to 220 passengers in a two-class configuration, with up to 244 passengers in a high-density arrangement.
A321neo | |
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An Airbus A321neo of Cathay Pacific | |
Role | Single-aisle airliner |
National origin | Multi-national |
Manufacturer | Airbus |
First flight | 9 February 2016 |
Introduction | 31 May 2017 with Virgin America |
Status | In service |
Primary users | Wizz Air IndiGo American Airlines China Southern Airlines |
Produced | 2016–present |
Number built | 1,248 as of December 2023 |
Developed from | Airbus A321 Airbus A320neo family |
The A321neo was announced by Airbus in December 2010, as an improvement & replacement to the A321ceo. Fitted with new engines and sharklets as standard, the A321neo has the longest fuselage of any Airbus narrow-body airliner of commercial use. Fitted with CFM International LEAP-1A or Pratt and Whitney PurePower PW1100G-JM geared turbofan engines, Airbus advertises a 20% increase in fuel efficiency per passenger, with 500 nautical miles more range, or 2 more tons of payload. Boeing introduced a new generation of their competing narrowbody family 737 MAX one year after the introduction of the A321neo.
The A321neo began production in 2016, with final assembly taking place in Hamburg, Germany. It entered service with Virgin America on 31 May 2017, taking its first commercial flight. As of December 2023, a total of 6,171 A321neo aircraft had been ordered by 85 disclosed customers, of which 1,248 aircraft had been delivered.