Airbus
Airbus A320 Family
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The flagship of the A320 family and one of the best-selling aircraft in history, the A320 competes directly with the Boeing 737.
Airbus A320-200
320
A320
- Seats
- 150 seats
- Range
- 6100 km
- Speed
- 828 km/h
- Length
- 37,57 m
Out of Production
Airbus A320neo
32N
A20N
- Seats
- 150 seats
- Range
- 6300 km
- Speed
- 828 km/h
- Length
- 37,57 m
In Production
Variant Comparison
| Variant | Seats | Range | Length | Wingspan | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airbus A320-200 | 150 | 6100 km | 37,57 m | 35,80 m | Out of Production |
| Airbus A320neo | 150 | 6300 km | 37,57 m | 35,80 m | In Production |
Frequently Asked Questions
The Airbus A320 family includes the A318, A319, A320, and A321 in both ceo (current engine option) and neo (new engine option) variants. The A321XLR is the latest addition with transatlantic range. With over 18,000 orders, it is the most-ordered commercial aircraft family.
The variants primarily differ in fuselage length: A318 (31.4m, 107 seats), A319 (33.8m, 140 seats), A320 (37.6m, 180 seats), A321 (44.5m, 220 seats). The neo variants feature CFM LEAP-1A or PW1100G engines with 15-20% fuel savings. All share the same cockpit type rating, allowing pilots to fly any variant.
Major operators include IndiGo (the world's largest A320 operator), American Airlines, easyJet, China Southern, JetBlue, Spirit Airlines, and Wizz Air. The A320 family is used by over 300 airlines and is the backbone of most low-cost carrier fleets worldwide.
The Airbus A320 first flew on February 22, 1987, and entered service with Air France in April 1988. It was the first commercial aircraft with digital fly-by-wire controls and sidestick controllers, setting the template for all subsequent Airbus designs.