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Which Airlines Fly the Airbus A350? Full 2026 Operator List

The A350 is the most passenger-friendly long-haul aircraft in service. But not all A350 operators deliver the same experience. Here is every airline flying the A350 in 2026, ranked by economy class quality.

J Jojo ·March 28, 2026·5 min read

Why the A350 Operator Matters

Knowing your flight is on an A350 is useful — but the A350 is a canvas, and different airlines paint it very differently. The same aircraft can have economy seats ranging from 17.3 to 18.5 inches depending on the airline's configuration. Service, meal quality, and IFE are entirely down to the operator.

This guide lists every major A350 operator as of 2026 and ranks their economy class experience.


Tier 1: Best A350 Economy Products

Singapore Airlines

SIA was the A350's launch customer and has built some of the most acclaimed economy seats in the sky on the aircraft. Their A350 economy uses 9-abreast 3-3-3 seating at 18.0 inches width and 32-inch pitch. KrisWorld IFE includes 1,800+ hours of content on 11.1-inch screens. The cabin crew service is consistent with the airline's premium reputation.

  • Routes: Singapore–London, Singapore–Sydney, Singapore–Tokyo, Singapore–Mumbai, and more

Cathay Pacific

Cathay's A350-900 and A350-1000 (the longest-range widebody) cover Hong Kong's long-haul network. Economy is 3-3-3 at 17.5 inches width, 32-inch pitch. The Studio CX IFE is strong on Hollywood and Asian content. Crew service is professional and attentive.

  • Routes: Hong Kong–London, HK–Vancouver, HK–Sydney, HK–Johannesburg (A350-1000)

EVA Air

EVA Air's 787-9 fleet is more well-known, but their A330-based routes are being supplemented with A350s on key routes. Economy seat width competitive at 17.5–18.0 inches depending on configuration.

Qatar Airways

Qatar's A350s are deployed on middle-to-long-haul routes from Doha. Their A350 economy is adequate but not exceptional — Qatar's investment is in business class (Qsuites). Economy is 3-3-3 at 17.5 inches.

  • Routes: Doha–London, Doha–Dublin, Doha–Bangkok, Doha–Kuala Lumpur

Tier 2: Above Average A350 Operations

Finnair

Finnair's A350-900s cover European–Asia routes via Helsinki. Economy is 3-3-3 at 17.3 inches — slightly narrow but a genuine improvement over the A330 they replaced. Helsinki hub offers convenient Europe–Asia connections.

  • Routes: Helsinki–Tokyo, Helsinki–Singapore, Helsinki–Bangkok, Helsinki–Shanghai

Lufthansa

Lufthansa's A350-900 operations are focused on the Frankfurt hub to Asia and Americas. Economy is 3-3-3 with standard Lufthansa service — functional, efficient, unremarkable. Seat width typically 17.3 inches.

Air France

Air France uses A350-900 on medium-to-long-haul routes. Economy is 3-3-3 at 17.5 inches. Meal quality is generally above European carrier average — Air France makes catering a point of pride even in economy.

Vietnamese Airlines (Vietnam Airlines)

Vietnam Airlines operates A350-900 on Europe–Vietnam routes. Economy is functional; service quality improving. Useful for routing through Ho Chi Minh City or Hanoi.


Tier 3: Standard A350 Operations

China Eastern / China Southern / Hainan Airlines

Chinese carriers operate A350s primarily on domestic and Asia-Pacific routes. Economy is typically 3-3-3 with adequate but undifferentiated service. IFE is primarily Chinese-language content.

Thai Airways

Thai Airways uses A350-900 on Bangkok–Europe routes. The carrier's financial difficulties in recent years have affected consistency; the aircraft is excellent but service quality is variable.

Iberia

Iberia's A350 covers Madrid–Buenos Aires and Madrid–New York routes. Economy is 3-3-3; service style reflects Iberia's recent focus on Spanish and Latin American routes.


Tier 4: Limited A350 Operations

Saudia (Saudi Arabian Airlines): A350s on Middle East–Europe routes; service varies.

Starlux Airlines (Taiwan): Taiwan's premium new carrier launched with A350-900s; excellent product for a young airline — aggressive compensation for delays, good IFE.

Aeroflot: Operations status fluctuating due to ongoing sanctions; A350s may be grounded.


How to Check if Your Flight is on an A350

  1. Search your flight on Google Flights — aircraft type listed under "Flight details"
  2. Check airline's flight status pages (most list aircraft type)
  3. Use SeatMaps.com or AeroLOPA to verify the seat map matches an A350 configuration

Use the aircraft comparison tool to compare the A350-900 or A350-1000 against any other aircraft on your route.

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Use our free calculator to run the numbers for your specific flight.

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