Embraer
Embraer E190
Embed This Widget
Add the script tag and a data attribute to embed this widget.
Embed via iframe for maximum compatibility.
<iframe src="https://planefyi.com/iframe/entity//" width="420" height="400" frameborder="0" style="border:0;border-radius:10px;max-width:100%" loading="lazy"></iframe>
Paste this URL in WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-compatible platform.
https://planefyi.com/entity//
Add a dynamic SVG badge to your README or docs.
[](https://planefyi.com/entity//)
Use the native HTML custom element.
E90
E190
Out of Production
Dimensions
- Length
- 36.24 m
- Wingspan
- 28.72 m
- Height
- 10.28 m
- Cabin Width
- 2.74 m
Performance
- Range
- 4,537 km
- Cruise Speed
- 829 km/h
- Max Speed
- 870 km/h
- Service Ceiling
- 12,497 m
- Category
- medium-haul
Capacity
- Typical Seats
- 96
- Max Seats
- 114
- Cargo Volume
- 18.40 m³
- Size
- regional
Engines
- Count
- 2
- Type
- Turbofan
- Model
- GE CF34-10E5
Airlines (13)
Family Variants
Engine Profiles
Aircraft Systems
About Embraer E190
The larger E-Jet with 100-seat capacity, bridging regional and mainline operations. JetBlue uses the E190 to serve smaller airports that cannot support larger aircraft economics.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Embraer E190 typically seats 97 passengers in a standard two-class configuration with 10 first class and 87 economy seats. In a single-class layout, it can carry up to 114 passengers. The cabin features a 2-2 seating arrangement at 2.74 m wide, identical to the smaller E175 but with a longer fuselage accommodating more seat rows.
The Embraer E190 has a maximum range of approximately 4,537 km (2,450 nautical miles) with a full passenger load. This range covers routes like New York to Houston, London to Athens, or Sao Paulo to Buenos Aires. The aircraft is powered by two General Electric CF34-10E engines, which provide 18,500 lbs of thrust each, a significant step up from the CF34-8E engines on the smaller E175.
The E190's 2-2 seating configuration is its biggest passenger comfort advantage — there are no middle seats anywhere in the aircraft. Every passenger has either a window or aisle seat, which is uncommon for a jet of this size. The overhead bins are large enough for standard carry-on roller bags, and the 2.0 m cabin height allows comfortable standing for most passengers. The wide window design also provides good natural light throughout the cabin.
JetBlue Airways is one of the most prominent E190 operators, using the type on thinner routes from its Northeast US focus cities. Azul Brazilian Airlines operates the largest E190 fleet in Latin America. In Europe, KLM Cityhopper and Air France HOP fly the E190 on regional European routes. Copa Airlines in Panama and Aeromexico Connect also maintain significant E190 fleets for connecting smaller cities to their respective hubs.
The A220-100 (formerly Bombardier CS100) is the closest competitor to the E190, both targeting the 100-seat market. The A220-100 seats about 110 passengers in two classes versus the E190's 97, and offers superior range at 5,460 km compared to 4,537 km. The A220-100 also features more advanced Pratt & Whitney geared turbofan engines with lower fuel consumption. However, the E190 has a lower purchase price and a well-established global support network after nearly two decades of operation.
Explore on Sister Sites
Airlines Operating This Aircraft
↗ AirlineFYI
Explore airlines, routes, and flight numbers worldwide
Airport & Route Database
↗ AirportFYI
55,000+ airports with flight routes and distance data
Airport Rail Links
↗ TrainFYI
Train stations connecting to airports served by this aircraft