A321XLR flying near the great ocean road

Qantas' A321XLR has taken to the skies

Qantas' first two next-generation Airbus A321XLR aircraft are now in operation servicing commercial flights.
Latest News|Published 26 September 2025

The two A321XLR aircraft, 'Great Ocean Road' (VH-OGA) and 'Outback Way' (VH-OGB), operated their inaugural commercial services between Sydney and Melbourne and Sydney and Perth respectively.

Qantas is the first airline in the Asia Pacific region to fly the new aircraft type, and the fourth airline globally.

The A321XLR features a wider and longer cabin than previous generation narrowbody aircraft, with wider seats, higher ceilings, larger windows, fast and free Wi-Fi and space for around 60 per cent more bags than Qantas' Boeing 737s. The A321XLR use less fuel per seat than the 737 it replaces, enabling a reduction in carbon emissions*.

Qantas' third aircraft is expected to arrive in November, with the fleet to grow to seven by June 2026.

In August, Qantas announced an order for an additional 20 A321XLR aircraft, including lie-flat Business seats on 16 aircraft to serve longer routes, including transcontinental services to and from Perth, and short and medium haul international routes.

This takes Qantas' current A321XLR order to 48 aircraft. The aircraft is a key part of the Qantas Group's largest ever fleet renewal program, with more than 200 aircraft on firm order and additional purchase right options with both Airbus and Boeing providing flexibility for future growth.

A321XLR Facts

Qantas A321XLRs are five metres longer than the 737-800 and will seat 197 passengers (20 Business seats and 177 Economy seats) – an increase of 13 per cent in total seat capacity with no reduction in space between seats and a 66 per cent increase in Business seats

Important information

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*The A321XLR enables reduced fuel burn and lower emissions per seat on like-for-like sectors compared to previous generation aircraft.