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Home » Cubana » What Happened To the Cubana IL-96?
Cubana

What Happened To the Cubana IL-96?

Matthew Klint Posted onJune 30, 2023November 13, 2023 25 Comments

a plane flying in the sky

UPDATE: While the fate of the Cubana Ilyushin IL-96 is still not fully clear, a promising sign has emerged that at least two of these aircraft will be restored and put back into service.

Per Granma, the official Communist Party newspaper in Cuba, the state-run Cuban Aviation Corporation S. A. (CACSA) has begun work to restore three jets for service, including two jets for “longhaul” flights:

“[CACSA] is working on the recovery of two long-range and one medium-range aircraft as part of the recovery of the fleet, said Joel Beltrán Archer Santos, president of the entity.

“These processes, he said, have been developed prior to COVID-19 and suffered delays due to the difficulties related to the pandemic. Beltrán believes that these aircraft will return to service in the second half of the year.”

My guess is that the two longhaul flights Santos is referring to are CU-T1250 and CU-T1251, the two IL-96 aircraft that were most often used prior to the pandemic. Per flight records, neither aircraft has flown lately, with the last flight on CU-T1250 from Havana to Moscow and back in August 2022. CU-1251 has not flown in over a year.

There was fear then that Russia would simply buy these aircraft from Cubana in 2022 since Western sanctions against Russia have made it more difficult to obtain spare parts for Airbus and Boeing aircraft. Thankfully, it appeared that the visit of CU-T1250 was just for servicing and the aircraft returned to Havana (where it has not flown for nearly 11 months).

It is not clear how much work, if any, is required to make these aircraft airworthy, but spare parts will certainly be a concern (and may explain why Cubana has four of these aircraft but plans to return only two to service – it may need the parts from the other two).

In any case, it appears we are one step closer to the return of the last commercial operators of the IL-96 and when that plane is restored to service I look forward to traveling to Havana to fly it.

My original story, which appeared on July 20, 2022 is below.


One of my travel goals this year was to fly on the Cubana Illuysihin IL-96 but it now appears the aircraft is grounded. Speculating about the fate of this aircraft or mysterious Cubana Airlines itself is about all we can do.

The Unknown Fate Of The Cubana Ilyushin IL-96

I’ve been waiting for United Airlines to restore service to Havana (HAV) and for the Biden Administration to lift Trump-era restrictions concerning travel and spending money in Cuba. Once that occurs (or perhaps even before it does), I plan to return for the first time in nearly a decade. Havana is fascinating city, but it won’t be to visit Havana – it will be to catch a once-weekly IL-96 operating from Havana to Buenos Aires.

At least that was the plan. For several weeks, the flight has been cancelled. If I try to buy a seat on future Sundays (it only operates on Sundays), the flight does not show in the system. It’s not that the flight is sold out: it simply doesn’t show up at all.

Cubana is (was) using two IL-96, one with tail number CU-T1250 and the other CU-T1251. I’ve been tracking those on Flightradar24 and they have not moved in quite some time.

I realize it is now winter in Argentina and perhaps there is presently little demand  for even just a weekly flight between Buenos Aires and Havana. But we have not seen the IL-96 pop up on Cubana’s Madrid route, which instead operates on a wet-leased Airbus A340. Service to Paris Orly and London Gatwick is currently suspended.

I’ve written about my travel regrets before. Specifically, I had a chance to fly the Lockheed L-1011 and didn’t. Huge regret. I had a chance to fly the Douglas DC-10 and didn’t Huge regret. I had the chance to fly an Air France Airbus A380 and didn’t. Huge regret. I had the chance to fly the IL-114 in Uzbekistan with Ben from One Mile At A Time and didn’t. Huge regret. And of course my biggest aviation-related regret of all is that I never flew Concorde. Hopefully, there won’t be regret about this aircraft too. These aircraft are not all that old, but Cubana is the last commercial operator.

CONCLUSION

This post is therapy for me. It’s not like there is anything I can do to influence whether the IL-96 ever flies for Cubana again. I just have to lean in and in the future, balance that while haste makes waste…time waits for no man.


> Read More:

  • Any Interest In A Cubana IL-96 Trip Report?
  • 5 Planes I Wish I Had Flown
  • The Airline of Mystery: Cubana de Aviación

image: Dmitry Terekhov

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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25 Comments

  1. Roland Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 5:56 pm

    Maybe it is for the better that you don’t fly these aircraft, safetywise that is …

  2. DavidM Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 6:24 pm

    What about the DC-3? There is a Christmas flight schedule that used to originate out of SNA for a 15-20 minute flight to view Christmas lights on the ground. I took my daughter on that 3-4 years ago, not because of the lights, but because it was a DC-3. The plane was the first I flew as a kid for a while distance of 80 miles on a commercial flight. The plane is based in Chino Hills.

  3. John Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 7:02 pm

    I remember back in 1982 when I worked for New York Air there was an interline offer from BA to fly JFK to LHR on the Concorde and back on a 747. The cost, $50.00. Back then I was making $5.50/hour and didn’t have a spare $50 to take them up on the offer. I have regretted it ever since.

    • Goforride Reply
      July 28, 2023 at 1:15 pm

      I remember it well. I didn’t do it either, thinking I can always do it “later.”

  4. viapanam Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 7:51 pm

    I also regret not flying Concorde. Back in the late 90s and early 00s (before it sadly stopped flying in 2003) BA offered a special round trip ticket – Concorde Eastbound and the B747 return. They did this as Concorde never sold as well flying eastbound from NY to London, as it did westbound. The ticket price was way below a standard Concorde fare, but still way above my limited budget. In retrospect, I should have tried harder to find the money. Huge regret for me.

  5. jsm Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 8:07 pm

    You wrote: I had a chance to fly the Lockheed L-1011 and didn’t. Huge regret. I had a chance to fly the Douglas DC-10 and didn’t Huge regret. I had the chance to fly an Air France Airbus A380 and didn’t. Huge regret

    That got me thinking as to how many different aircraft I remember flying. The list so far is:

    Lockheed Constellation
    Lockheed Electra
    BAC One-Eleven
    B 727, 737, 747, 757, 767
    A 319, 320, 321, 340, 380
    CRJ 700
    ATR 72
    Short 330

    This was a fun exercise. I’m sure other posters have far more impressive lists.

  6. HB Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 8:33 pm

    Indeed jsm.

    For me:

    A300, 310,320, 321, 340, 350, 380
    B 707, 720B, 727, 737, 747, 757, 767, 777, 787 (almost all models)
    BAC 148
    BE 18, 99
    Concord (G-BOAC LHR-IAD) – Amazing trip!
    CV 440, 580, 880, 990
    DC 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10 (most models)
    DHC 6, 7, 8
    F-100
    HP 137
    HS 748
    L-1011
    MR 404
    SW Metro
    SUD Caravelle (UA)
    Viscount (UA)

    As a pilot, I flew the DC-3, DC-4, DHC-6, HP-137, HS-748, B727-737-747, DC4, DC8, DC9, DC10.

    What a wonderful career to have the privileged of flying all these magnificent machines!

    We are both showing our age………….

  7. HB Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 8:52 pm

    I left out all the RJ’s as I hate them all, especially the CRJ 200 and ERJ 145. The Q400 is actually nice.

    United Express, Delta Connection, American Eagle – Pissing off America 50 people at at time….

    • This Reply
      April 12, 2023 at 11:54 pm

      THIS

  8. derek Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 9:17 pm

    This makes me feel lucky, having flown aboard the L1011-1, L1011-100, L1011-250, L1011-500, DC-10-10, DC-10-30, and DC-10-40. Sadly, I was not aggressive enough to book the Concorde. I also had the chance to fly on the Dassault Mercure but did not.

    Surprisingly, I have never flown aboard an A380. I better get cracking. I see the best chances on a LH, SQ, or QF A380.

  9. MeanMeosh Reply
    July 20, 2022 at 11:08 pm

    Fun game jsm started. My list:

    B717, 727, 737 (200,300,700,800,900,MAX8), 747 (200,400,8,8i), 757, 767 (200,300,400), 777 (200,300), 787 (8,9,10)
    MD80, MD88, MD90
    DC-9, DC-10
    L-1011
    A220 (100 and 300), 319, 320, 321 (standard and neo), 330, 340, 350 (900 and 1000), 380
    Saab 2000
    CRJ-500, 900
    EMB 170, 175, 190, 195
    ATR-72

    Fun story on my one flight on the L-1011. My dad hated flying, but was obsessed with that plane. We ended up on a DL Tri-Star ATL-SJU in the summer of 1998 on our way to catch a cruise out of San Juan. I don’t ever recall him being particularly excited (or even happy) getting on a plane, but he actually seemed genuinely thrilled to fly that L-1011. (Something that in hindsight, I find really odd, considering the DL 191 crash at DFW was a Tri-Star.)

  10. Mick Reply
    July 21, 2022 at 2:30 am

    You not flying the dc10 makes me feel old!! Seemed a United mainstay when we travelled between australia and Dayton for my dads job. I could only identify which aircraft it was by seeing which line it pulled up to at the gate!!

    Going to be a ton of young bloggers wishing they had flown a 747 “back in the day” soon. My son is obsessed with them (he’s 9). Every time we see a new airline he asks if they fly 747s. No, ITA doesn’t have a 747 🙂

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      July 21, 2022 at 6:04 am

      I hope he has flown the 747!

      • Mick Reply
        July 21, 2022 at 8:34 am

        Yep! Upper deck on LH from Frankfurt to ord. We deliberately detoured from London and overnighted to catch it. And we skipped the upgrade to F because he wanted upper deck. Was a good decision :). Hes also done qf F on the A380 but sadly (to him) it was downstairs. Lucky kid!!!

  11. Stuart Reply
    July 21, 2022 at 4:32 am

    707
    720
    717
    727-100/200
    737 (all variants)
    747 (all variants including the weird SP)
    757 (all)
    767 (all)
    777 (all)
    787 (all)
    DC 8
    DC 9 (all)
    DC 10 (all)
    MD 11
    L-1011 (all including the 500)
    BAC 1-11
    BAE 146
    Concorde (twice when USair had redemptions for it on BA)
    A300
    A310
    A318
    A319
    A320
    A321
    A330
    A340
    A350
    A380
    Embraer ERJ
    Embraer E-Jets
    CRJ (all including horrid 200)
    Fokker 28 Fellowship
    Fokker 70
    Fokker 100 (I had another name for these when AA flew them lol)

  12. James Harper Reply
    July 21, 2022 at 1:21 pm

    Wow, this has got me thinking:

    A221
    A223
    A300B4
    A300-600
    A310
    A318
    A319
    A320
    A20N
    A321
    A21N
    A21NLR
    A332
    A333
    A339
    A342
    A343
    A345
    A346
    A359
    A35K
    A380
    ATR-72
    BAC Concorde
    BAC1-11 400
    BAC 1-11 500 dubbed Super1-11 by BEA/BA
    BAe146-100 / Avro RJ70
    BAe146-200 / Avro RJ100
    707-320
    720B
    717
    727-100
    727-200
    737-200
    737-300
    737-400
    737-500
    737-700
    737-800
    747-200
    747-300
    747-400
    757-200
    767-200
    767-300
    777-200
    777-300
    777-300ER
    788
    789
    Bristol Britannia 102
    Bristol Britannia 312
    Canadair RJ500
    Canadair RJ700
    Canadair RJ900
    De Havilland Comet 4B
    De Havilland Comet 4C
    DHC – Dash 8-400
    Dornier 228
    Embraer 170
    Embraer 175
    Embraer 190
    Fokker F27
    Fokker F28
    Fokker F50
    Fokker F70
    Fokker F100
    HS121 Trident 1C
    HS121 Trident 1E
    HS121 Trident 3
    Lockheed L1011 TriStar 200
    Lockheed L1011 TriStar 500
    McDonnell Douglas DC8-21
    McDonnel Douglas DC8-55
    McDonnel Douglas DC8-62
    McDonnell Douglas DC9-15
    McDonnell Douglas DC9-30
    McDonnell Douglas DC9-40
    McDonnell Douglas DC9-50
    McDonnell Douglas MD81
    McDonnell Douglas MD82
    McDonnell Douglas MD83
    McDonnell Douglas MD87
    McDonnell Douglas MD88
    McDonnell Douglas DC10-30
    McDonnell Douglas MD11
    Shorts 330
    Shorts 360
    Vickers VC10 1101
    Vickers VC10 – Super VC10
    Vickers Viscount 702
    Vickers Viscount 813
    Vickers Viscount 815

    I guess it would be no surprise that the A320 series comes in top but the 744 is second.

  13. Steve Kemper Reply
    July 21, 2022 at 2:13 pm

    Always love looking back at my flight log. I’m not a pilot, but still have kept a log for the last 25+ years. My more exotic birds that I’ve flow on include the following:

    Concorde – Air France twice
    Grumman Mallard – Chalk’s Ocean Airways
    Douglas DC-3 – Servivensa and Aeroejecutivos
    Ilyushin 62 – Cubana
    Ilyushin 86 – China Xinjiang Airlines
    Xian yunshuji-7 – Nanjing Airlines
    Let L-410 – Aerotaxi
    DeHaviland DHC-2 Beaver Floatplane – Kenmore Air / San Francisco Seaplane Tours
    Lockheed L-1011 – Delta
    Sukhoi Superjet 100 – Interjet
    Boeing 727-200 – Champion Air (and others when lots younger)

    • Goforride Reply
      July 28, 2023 at 1:28 pm

      What was the Superjet like? I assumed it just felt like a 737?

  14. Lukasz Reply
    September 4, 2022 at 3:31 pm

    IL 96 sometimes appears on Madrid route and was a regular to Buenos for years. Maybe they will come back again

  15. Joe United Reply
    June 30, 2023 at 12:36 pm

    United is currently flying to Havana from Newark and Houston.

    • Thomas Reply
      July 2, 2023 at 8:57 am

      I will book it from Madrid or Paris as soon as they are back. Not sure if Russia will build more of them.

      Plus i’ve never been to Cuba 🙂

  16. WW Reply
    July 3, 2023 at 2:06 am

    I was lucky enough to get to fly most types of aircraft; operating from the early 1980s to today. However never flown on any Russian types. A regret, to this day!

    My most notable were:-
    Flying the DC-3 ; PBA airlines, from Miami to Key West. (Pulling my window-curtains back and enjoying the sunset over Florida)
    Flying a half SQ-liveried Concorde from Singapore (Paya Lebar) to London…via Bahrain.
    TAP A340, from Macau to Lisbon; via BKK and Brussels (I think)
    Cathay’s first ever no-stop 747-200 flight from HKG to LGW.

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      July 3, 2023 at 10:17 am

      You are very blessed!

  17. Sylvester Alelele Reply
    July 3, 2023 at 1:32 pm

    And so the onus is on Ilyushin, Tupolev and Antonov aviation companies to put an effective MRO Program in place so that the last commercial operator of their aircraft stay in business while they search for new customers!

  18. Goforride Reply
    July 28, 2023 at 1:26 pm

    747-100
    DC-10
    L-1011
    Namco YS-11
    Nord 262
    Bac-1-11
    Embrarer Bandeirante
    Beech 99
    SWM
    Cessna 402
    Britten-Norman Islander
    De Havilland Twin Otter
    Shorts 330
    Shorts 360
    Fokker F27
    Fokker F28
    Beech 1900
    ATR
    DHC-7
    BAe 146
    DC-9-10
    DC-9-30
    Jetstream J-31
    Martin 404
    Convair 440
    Convair 580

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