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Oct 30, 2025

Air India Express Targets 200-Jet Fleet, Shifts Focus to Domestic-plus-Regional Network

Air India Express Targets 200-Jet Fleet, Shifts Focus to Domestic-plus-Regional Network
Low-cost carrier Air India Express (AIX) has unveiled an aggressive five-year growth plan that will see its fleet double to more than 200 Boeing and Airbus narrow-body aircraft, Managing Director Aloke Singh told reporters on 30 October 2025. The Tata-group subsidiary currently splits capacity evenly between domestic and short-haul international markets; by 2030 that ratio will move to 60 % domestic, reflecting India’s surging tier-2 and tier-3 passenger demand.

For corporate travel managers the message is clear: expect a denser web of same-day connections linking manufacturing clusters such as Coimbatore, Surat and Nagpur with Gulf business hubs and South-East Asia. AIX’s hybrid model—including buy-on-board hot meals and 20-kg checked-baggage allowances—remains popular with price-sensitive SME exporters and project engineers who require flexibility but shun ultra-low-cost carriers.

The expansion coincides with Delhi’s mammoth airport Terminal 3 refurbishment, which has forced both Air India and AIX to realign domestic operations to Terminals 1 and 2. Mobility coordinators must therefore update employee travel briefs regarding check-in points and minimum connection times effective this winter schedule.

From a mobility policy standpoint, AIX’s intent to harmonise its Boeing 737MAX and Airbus A320neo cabins enables companies to apply uniform baggage and seat-selection rules across routes, simplifying expense auditing. However, the carrier has not yet confirmed whether the enlarged fleet will include lie-flat business-class seats for transcontinental flights—a factor that could influence travel-policy cabin entitlements when connecting to Europe via Gulf codeshare partners.
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