British Airways is pulling more A380s from some routes, raising questions on IAG’s premium cabin strategy as travel trends shift. LONDON, June 30, 2026, 09:13 (BST)
- London markets were open at the dateline, with International Consolidated Airlines Group (LON:IAG) last trading at 473.90p at 08:59 BST, off 0.27%, Google Finance data showed. LSE trading hours are 08:00 to 16:30 local time.
- British Airways has cut A380 flights to seven destinations tied to Heathrow over the past decade, new route data from Simple Flying and Travel And Tour World shows.
- Investors are focused on the seat mix. The reported A380 refit reduces the total seat count from 469 to 421, but adds more business and premium-economy seats.
British Airways, part of International Consolidated Airlines Group (LON:IAG), has cut the Airbus A380 from seven routes tied to Heathrow since it began flying passengers in 2013. The dropped routes give investors a look at where BA doesn’t want to use the superjumbo for its flight time or Heathrow slots. IAG owns British Airways, Iberia, Vueling, Aer Lingus, LEVEL, IAG Loyalty and IAG Cargo.
Aviation A2Z, using Cirium Diio schedule data through June 2026, listed Chicago O’Hare, Doha, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, Madrid, Vancouver, and Washington Dulles as dropped A380 routes. The report also noted Dallas/Fort Worth isn’t on that list since A380 service came back in May 2026, and Singapore is set to return in September 2026.
| Former BA A380 route from Heathrow | A380 service period | Read-through for investors |
|---|---|---|
| Chicago O’Hare | 2018–2019; 2022–2023 | A380 stopped on this U.S. route |
| Doha | 2022–2023 | World Cup flights, not a standard A380 run |
| Frankfurt | 2013; 2021 | A380 used for crew work and storage |
| Hong Kong | 2013–2020 | Had the most former A380 departures |
| Madrid | 2021 | Used briefly for crew training in storage phase |
| Vancouver | 2016–2019; 2022 | Stopped as a regular A380 long-haul |
| Washington Dulles | 2014–2020; 2022–2025 | Last U.S. A380 exit on this list |
Hong Kong stands out in the figures. Aviation A2Z reports the route saw 2,329 A380 departures, leading all of BA’s former A380 markets. BA switched to the A350-1000 there. The seven dropped routes ran 22,741 network miles and touched eight airports, among them Heathrow.
BA lists 12 A380s in the fleet, with its website showing 469 seats each. A refit is set to cut capacity to 421 seats, shifting space to business and premium economy.
| Cabin | Current seats | Reported refit seats | Seat change | Current share | Refit share |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First | 14 | 12 | -2 | 3.0% | 2.9% |
| Business | 97 | 110 | +13 | 20.7% | 26.1% |
| Premium economy | 55 | 84 | +29 | 11.7% | 20.0% |
| Economy | 303 | 215 | -88 | 64.6% | 51.1% |
| Total | 469 | 421 | -48 | 100.0% | 100.0% |
| Premium cabins combined | 166 | 206 | +40 | 35.4% | 48.9% |
This is the key reason IAG cares about the A380 route list. With 48 seats gone after the refit, the aircraft has to earn more per seat, not just move more passengers. The main shift isn’t in First class. The real move is taking out 88 economy seats and putting in 42 more business and premium-economy spots, along with two fewer First seats.
IAG’s Q1 figures shift focus to price and mix over capacity. The group’s available seat kilometres edged up just 0.2%, but passenger revenue per ASK climbed 3.5%. British Airways posted operating profit of £186 million, up from £96 million a year ago. CEO Luis Gallego said IAG is “actively managing the uncertainty created by the fuel price increase” and has seen “no issues with fuel availability” in core markets. IAIR Group
| IAG measure | Q1 2026 | Year-on-year read |
|---|---|---|
| Total revenue | €7.181 billion | Up 1.9% |
| Operating profit | €351 million | Jumped 77.3% |
| Operating margin | 4.9% | Gained 2.1 percentage points |
| Group capacity | +0.2% | Almost unchanged |
| Passenger revenue per ASK | +3.5% | Price and mix ahead of capacity |
| British Airways operating profit | £186 million | Was £96 million in Q1 2025 |
Gallego told Reuters in February, “Since Q3 we have seen a rebound,” saying premium and corporate demand has picked up at British Airways. The A380 refit puts BA’s premium bet to the test: fewer seats, better cabins, and a sharper focus on route selection. Reuters
IAG traded near its 52-week peak in early London hours, with shares at 473.90p as of 08:59 BST on Google Finance. The 52-week range goes from 332.70p to 492.90p.
IAG’s next item on the calendar is second-quarter 2026 results, set for July 31.