Thai Airways Selling Off Fleet of Airbus A380 Planes

Image: Thai Airways Airbus A380 at Tokyo Narita International Airport.  (Photo Credit: Toshiro Aoki at jp-spotters.com.)
Image: Thai Airways Airbus A380 at Tokyo Narita International Airport. (Photo Credit: Toshiro Aoki at jp-spotters.com.)
Rich Thomaselli
by Rich Thomaselli
Last updated: 2:35 PM ET, Mon October 16, 2023

Thai Airways is selling its fleet of Airbus A380 planes.

But why?

Well, in the complex world of aviation, there is a simple answer. It has outlived its usefulness.

Many airlines are finding that for economic and sustainable reasons, among others, the world’s largest commercial airliner is no longer needed. Carriers are finding that in the post-COVID era, they can fly from Point A to Point B much more cheaply and feasibly. 

“It was a popular airplane when it was introduced back in 2007 and remains a popular airplane with passengers today,” said Shea Oakley, a commercial aviation historian based in New York. “The bigger issue is has it been good for the airlines? And it’s more of a mixed bag there.”

Thai Airways has a modest fleet of six of the A380s and hasn’t flown one of them since the pandemic. It’s not that the equipment is anachronistic or anything. The plane is only 16 years old. And in fact, it has flown more than 300 million passengers.

But the numbers are dwindling.

According to airline data analysis firm Cirium, just 154 of the more than 250 built in the last 14 years remain. The company also estimates that by year’s end, it will fly 77,000 flights with the plane, as opposed to a high of 120,000 in 2019. Airbus stopped building the A380 almost three years ago. The airlines and passengers alike were thrilled that they were able to fly with customizable interiors, including stand-up bars and showers.

“It’s not that the A380 doesn’t have incredible technology — it does,” Oakley said. “It was sort of the wrong plane at the wrong time.”

For instance, what was once seen as powerful with its four engines is now a fuel-guzzler. 

“In theory, the A380 should have been successful because it lowered the per-passenger cost,” said Kerry Tan, a professor at Loyola University, Maryland. “But that assumed that all of the seats — or at least most of the seats — would be full. Airlines thought the demand would be there, unfortunately, it wasn’t necessarily the case.”


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