Air India will operate its new Boeing 787-9 aircraft with certain limitations as the Tata Group-owned airline is awaiting approvals from US watchdog FAA for the sliding privacy doors in the plane's business class suites and for 18 economy class seats.
The aircraft, also the first custom-made Dreamliner to join the Air India fleet after takeover by the Tata Group in January 2022, will enter commercial operations on the Mumbai-Frankfurt route from February 1. The plane has 296 seats, comprising 30 business class, 28 premium economy and 238 economy class seats. Out of them, 18 economy class seats will not be available for use till the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) give its approval, it is learnt.
An airline spokesperson said the new B787-9 will enter commercial operations on February 1 with certain limitations. "The sliding privacy doors in our business class suites will remain securely fixed in the open position and unavailable for passenger use as this specific seat feature awaits regulatory approval. We expect to receive the necessary approval in the near future. All other seat features are available for passenger use," the spokesperson said.
Separately, a total of 18 specific economy class seats are blocked from sale and are also physically blocked from use. "The seat product itself (RECARO 3710) is fully certified and in regular operation on many airlines worldwide. However, there is a regulatory interpretation affecting the 18 specific seats that we are working with the manufacturer and regulator to resolve. The 18 specific seats will only be offered for sale once full certification is received," the spokesperson said.
An FAA spokesperson, however, said they don't comment on ongoing certification work. There was no comment from Boeing either.
In 2026, five more wide-body aircraft, including three Boeing 787-9s and two A350-1000s, are set to join the Air India fleet. The airline, currently, has 188 planes, and the legacy Boeing 787s are undergoing retrofit progressively. According to the spokesperson, the product limitations due to pending certification apply only to the new B787-9 aircraft, and not to the retrofitted B787-8 planes.
These are two different variants, and their interior fit-out undergoes a separate certification process. The certifications for seats and features on the B787-8 are complete and have been approved by relevant regulators and will be available for customer use, the spokesperson said.
Sources said some global airlines are awaiting certain regulatory approvals for their business class seats. These include Lufthansa, which is awaiting regulatory certification nod for some of the business class seats in their new Boeing 787-9 aircraft, they said.
At present, Air India has 33 Boeing 787s, including 26 legacy Boeing 787-8s and seven Boeing 787-9s, six of which are from Vistara. In 2025, Boeing delivered 14 Boeing 787s to various airlines, including 12 Boeing 787-9s.
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