Bloomberg says Boeing’s 777X timeline slides again, with airlines and investors bracing for the ripple effects.
Boeing’s Response To The Airbus A350 Delays Again
Boeing’s 777X has been the big widebody bet for long-haul fleets looking for more range and better fuel burn. It first flew back in 2019, then ran headfirst into a thicket of certification work and shifting delivery targets. Now the calendar just moved again. Bloomberg reports the first commercial deliveries are being pushed from 2026 to early 2027, a fresh setback for the program. Reuters, citing the Bloomberg scoop, notes that Boeing declined to comment.
The New Timeline
Launch customer Lufthansa is already planning like 2027 is the year, keeping the 777X out of its fleet plans until then. Analysts add a little more caution, penciling deliveries into the second half of 2027 rather than the front end. None of this is official from Boeing, but it is consistent with what we have heard through the fall.
Some industry insiders were hopeful that it would be in 2025 as was speculated, then that slid to 2026 later this year, and now another full year out. If we haven’t seen an 777X delivery schedule by the middle of next year, 777 delays could extend unthinkably further out.
The Money Question
Delays are not just schedule lines on a Gantt chart, they are line items on an income statement. Reuters flags that Wall Street expects Boeing to take a charge related to the slippage, with estimates ranging from one to four billion dollars in the upcoming quarterly report. That would land on top of more than ten billion dollars in charges already taken on the 777X program. Free cash flow projections for 2026 have been trimmed as a result.
Certification Reality Check
Just a few weeks ago, Boeing’s CEO Kelly Ortberg said there is a “mountain of work” left to certify the jet. He also said no new technical problems were identified, which is good news, although it does not make the paperwork mountain any smaller. That context helps explain why the latest date slide feels less like a surprise and more like the schedule catching up with reality.
What Airlines Need To Do Now
If you are a 777X customer, you keep flying what you have and extend leases where you can. For Lufthansa specifically, that means planning around a 2027 arrival while keeping the current long-haul lineup in rotation. Every month the 777X is not flying is another month of deferrals, crew planning pivots, and maintenance juggling.
What To Watch Next
Eyes now shift to Boeing’s third-quarter earnings later this month. That is where we find out whether the company books a new charge, how it frames the 2027 handover, and whether there is any movement on certification milestones. Keep an eye on analyst notes too, since RBC and others are circling the second half of 2027 as a more realistic entry window.
Conclusion
The 777X delay to early 2027 lines up with what executives signaled in September and what airlines have quietly planned for in recent weeks. It is another reminder that certification is the critical path, not marketing brochures or airshow fly-bys. The financial hit may be meaningful, yet the strategic picture stays the same. Boeing needs the 777X in service to refresh aging widebody fleets, and airlines need the efficiency gains the type promises. Getting the paperwork finished, and the first tails delivered, is now the only story that matters.
What do you think?
“Getting the paperwork finished , and the first tails delivered , is now the only story that matters.”
Wrong … Wrong … Wrong .
The Only story which matters is Safety … Safety … Safety .