Back
Jan 16, 2026

EU Regulator Test-Flies COMAC C919, Paving Path for Chinese Jet’s Entry Into European Skies

EU Regulator Test-Flies COMAC C919, Paving Path for Chinese Jet’s Entry Into European Skies
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) confirmed on 15 January that its flight-test crew completed a series of evaluation sorties aboard China’s COMAC C919 in Shanghai. The flights mark a milestone in EASA’s validation process—a prerequisite for the Chinese narrow-body jet to be certified for commercial use by European airlines.

The C919, developed by state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (COMAC), entered domestic service in 2025 with China Eastern Airlines. International acceptance, however, hinges on endorsements from agencies such as EASA and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. EASA’s test campaign, which examined handling qualities, avionics, flight-control systems and safety documentation, moves COMAC a step closer to tapping lucrative export markets.

Companies dispatching technical staff to Shanghai for ongoing flight-test collaborations may find that navigating paperwork can be as complex as certifying an aircraft. VisaHQ’s online portal—specifically its China section at https://www.visahq.com/china/—simplifies the visa process with step-by-step checklists, live agent support and door-to-door courier options, ensuring engineers, pilots and auditors reach COMAC facilities on schedule.

EU Regulator Test-Flies COMAC C919, Paving Path for Chinese Jet’s Entry Into European Skies


If certification is secured, European carriers operating dense intra-EU routes could add the C919 as an alternative to Airbus A320neo and Boeing 737 MAX families, injecting fresh competition into a duopoly long dominated by Airbus and Boeing. Analysts note that a European green light would also make it easier for African and Middle-Eastern regulators—many of whom follow EASA standards—to clear the aircraft, broadening COMAC’s global reach.

For Chinese supply-chain firms, European acceptance would stimulate demand for domestically produced avionics, landing gear and composite structures. Multinationals eyeing passenger growth in China may need to familiarise engineering teams with a third aircraft type, affecting maintenance planning and pilot training budgets. Meanwhile, leasing companies headquartered in Ireland and Singapore are already assessing residual-value scenarios for inaugural export frames.

EASA has not issued a timetable for completion, but industry observers expect at least six more months of data analysis. Corporate mobility managers should monitor progress: once European certification is in hand, Chinese airlines may deploy C919s on Sino-European trunk routes, altering fleet mixes and potentially influencing cabin-product consistency for corporate travellers.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
×