(NEW YORK) JetBlue marked a major fleet milestone on September 10, 2025, flying its final revenue E190 service and completing its transition to an all-Airbus operation. The commemorative Flight #190 traveled from New York JFK to Boston Logan, mirroring the airline’s first E190 route from 2005 and closing nearly two decades of operations with the Brazilian-built regional jet. JetBlue has now retired all 63 E190s it once operated, replacing them with the Airbus A220-300, which is now the smallest aircraft in the carrier’s lineup.
The moment carried a personal note inside the cockpit. Warren Christie, JetBlue’s Chief Operating Officer—who captained the inaugural E190 flight in 2005—piloted the final flight as well. He was joined by original crew members and invited guests, turning the farewell into a living timeline of the airline’s growth in New York and Boston.

Executives framed the day as both an end and a beginning: a nod to an aircraft that helped JetBlue build a strong Northeast presence and a clear step toward a more efficient, simplified fleet. JetBlue says the move to an all-Airbus fleet will streamline operations and reduce costs by standardizing training, maintenance, and parts inventories.
Why JetBlue made the change
JetBlue and industry analysts highlight several benefits of a single-manufacturer strategy:
- Operational simplicity: standardizing pilot training, maintenance procedures, and spare parts inventory.
- Cost reductions: fewer manufacturers typically lower downtime and logistics costs.
- Improved resilience: fleet simplification often improves on-time performance and helps during irregular operations.
- Environmental and investor appeal: fleet modernization supports lower emissions and better regulatory alignment.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, such a pivot can help airlines meet growing environmental expectations from regulators and investors while maintaining a competitive cost base.
For official airline safety and certification resources, see the Federal Aviation Administration.
The phase-out and A220 deliveries
The final flight capped a three-year phase-out that began in 2022. As of September 2025:
- JetBlue has received 52 of its 100 ordered A220-300s.
- The remaining 48 A220s will arrive over the next several years.
The A220s operate alongside the carrier’s Airbus A320 family, creating a single-manufacturer fleet for the first time in JetBlue’s history. In practical terms:
- The A220-300 is now the airline’s smallest aircraft with 140 seats—about 40% more than the 100-seat E190.
- That increased capacity allows more seats on short- and medium-haul routes and enables longer routes previously out of reach for the E190.
Cabin experience and passenger amenities
JetBlue has emphasized the cabin as a central part of its brand. The E190 was known for a comfortable 2-2 layout with 25 rows, seatback entertainment, and free Wi‑Fi. The A220-300 builds on that with notable upgrades:
- Wider Collins-made seats
- In-seat power (AC, USB‑A, USB‑C) at every seat
- Extra-large windows
- Larger overhead bins
- Fast, free Fly‑Fi
The airline has also announced plans to debut new domestic first-class recliners on select aircraft starting in 2026, signaling continued investment in onboard comfort.
Fuel burn, emissions, and economics
Fuel efficiency was a central driver for the switch. JetBlue cites approximately 40% lower per-seat fuel burn on the A220-300 compared with the E190. That reduction has several implications:
- Lower operating costs — reduced exposure to fuel price swings.
- Smaller carbon footprint — aligns with environmental expectations from regulators and investors.
- Competitive positioning — helps JetBlue compete with legacy carriers and ultra-low-cost rivals renewing fleets for better economics.
Network and capacity trade-offs
The A220-300’s range and efficiency create network opportunities as well as trade-offs:
- Opportunities:
- Add seats on routes with robust demand.
- Open longer, thinner routes that were previously impractical for the E190.
- Test new transcontinental and international markets within JetBlue’s core strengths.
- Trade-offs:
- Some smaller markets may be harder to serve at high frequency with a larger aircraft.
- JetBlue will need to balance frequency and capacity as remaining A220 deliveries arrive.
Remembering the E190
JetBlue leaders have honored the E190’s role in the company’s growth. When JetBlue became the global launch customer in 2005, the E190 helped bridge underserved city pairs and supported expansion—especially in New York and Boston.
- The aircraft earned a reputation for comfort: no middle seats, individual screens, and reliable Wi‑Fi at a time when these features weren’t common.
- Employees and long-time customers expressed nostalgia as the final flight taxied, underscoring how aircraft can feel personal when tied to a brand for nearly twenty years.
Practical takeaways for travelers
For most passengers, the transition will feel straightforward: more seats, newer cabins, and consistent Airbus interiors across the fleet. Practical notes and expectations:
- Expect fuller flights on some routes that previously used the smaller E190.
- The A220 remains a single-aisle aircraft and is still quick to board, aided by larger overhead bins.
- Longer, thinner routes are now more viable—watch JetBlue’s schedule for new city pairs.
- New domestic first-class recliners are expected to begin appearing in 2026 on select aircraft.
Families, students, and workers who rely on JetBlue for core Northeast travel should see steadier schedules and potentially fewer cancellations during irregular operations due to standardization—though weather and air traffic control constraints will still affect operations.
Inside the numbers
Key figures that explain the business case:
Metric | E190 | A220-300 |
---|---|---|
Typical seat count | 100 | 140 |
Cabin layout | 2-2 | Modern single-aisle, wider seats |
Per-seat fuel burn | Baseline | ~40% lower |
A220s received (as of Sep 2025) | — | 52 of 100 ordered |
The A220’s combination of 40% more seats and ~40% lower per-seat fuel burn provides a powerful unit-cost improvement for routes where JetBlue operates.
Operational rollout: five-step plan
JetBlue describes the fleet plan in five clear steps:
- Announce and plan the retirement.
- Phase out E190s as A220s arrive.
- Transition pilot and crew training to Airbus systems.
- Celebrate the final E190 flight.
- Lean into the benefits of a single-manufacturer operation.
The final step brings tangible operational efficiencies: maintenance teams focus on one set of tools and procedures, simulators and spares are standardized, and crew cross-qualification becomes more flexible.
The wider E190 ecosystem
Although JetBlue has retired its E190s, the jet remains in service with other U.S. and international operators, including Delta, American (through regional partners), and Breeze Airways. Aircraft commonly move between operators as strategies evolve and economics change—so the E190 story continues beyond JetBlue.
Final thoughts from leadership
JetBlue’s leaders emphasized that the E190 helped build connectivity in New York and Boston, markets where short-haul flying shapes the broader network. The final JFK–Boston flight symbolically linked the airline’s past to its future. With the A220 now the smallest aircraft in the fleet, JetBlue aims to grow while keeping costs in check and improving the onboard experience.
For official information about schedules, aircraft features, and customer support, JetBlue directs travelers to jetblue.com or its customer line at 1‑800‑JETBLUE (1‑800‑538‑2583). Media inquiries can be sent to [email protected].
The quiet power of a single-manufacturer plan: fewer moving parts behind the scenes and fewer surprises for people who just need to get where they’re going.
This Article in a Nutshell
On September 10, 2025, JetBlue completed its transition to an all-Airbus operation by flying the final revenue Embraer E190 (Flight #190) from JFK to Boston Logan, retiring all 63 E190s after a three-year phase-out that began in 2022. The airline has received 52 of 100 ordered A220-300s; the A220-300 is now the smallest aircraft in the fleet with 140 seats, roughly 40% more capacity than the 100-seat E190, and delivers about 40% lower per-seat fuel burn. JetBlue says the single-manufacturer strategy will simplify pilot training, maintenance, and parts inventories, reduce costs, improve schedule resilience, and lower emissions. Cabin upgrades on the A220 include wider seats, in-seat power, larger windows, bigger overhead bins, and Fly‑Fi, with new domestic first-class recliners planned for select aircraft in 2026. The change expands network opportunities while requiring careful balance of frequency and capacity on smaller markets.