A Boeing Co. 737 Max airplane on the firm’s manufacturing facility in Renton, Washington, US, on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025.
David Ryder | Bloomberg | Getty Pictures
Boeing is ready to report this week that it delivered essentially the most airplanes since 2018 final yr after it stabilized its manufacturing, the clearest signal of a turnaround but after years of security crises and snowballing high quality defects.
Now, the aerospace big is planning to ramp up manufacturing.
“It is a lengthy street again from a … let’s consider, a fairly dysfunctional tradition, however they’re making massive progress,” stated Richard Aboulafia, managing director at AeroDynamic Advisory, an aerospace trade consulting agency.
Boeing was compelled to reduce manufacturing in recent times following two deadly crashes of its well-liked 737 Max plane in 2018 and 2019 and a midair blowout of a door plug from one among its planes within the first week of 2024. The Covid pandemic snarled airplane meeting at each Boeing and its chief rival, Airbus, with provide chain delays and lack of skilled employees, even after the worst of the well being disaster subsided.
A Boeing 737 approaches San Diego Worldwide for a touchdown, Might 10, 2025.
Kevin Carter | Getty Pictures
Boeing’s leaders, together with CEO Kelly Ortberg — a longtime aerospace government who got here out of retirement to take the highest job months after the midair door plug accident — are gearing as much as improve manufacturing this yr of its money cow 737 Max plane and the longer-range 787 Dreamliners.
That would assist the producer, the highest U.S. exporter by worth, return to profitability, as analysts anticipate this yr, territory that was out of attain for seven years as its leaders centered on harm management and have been caught reassuring annoyed airline executives who have been awaiting late planes.
Their tone has modified as Boeing has grow to be extra predictable and elevated manufacturing, with the Federal Aviation Administration’s blessing. In an indication of the FAA’s elevated confidence in Boeing, the company in September stated Boeing might challenge its personal air worthiness certificates earlier than prospects obtain a few of its 737s and 787s after years of restrictions.
Boeing’s industrial plane enterprise is its largest unit, accounting for about 46% of gross sales within the first 9 months of final yr, with the remainder coming from its protection and companies enterprise. Boeing final reported a full-year revenue in 2018.
Buyers are optimistic for additional enchancment. Boeing shares have gained 36% over the past 12 months, outpacing the S&P 500‘s almost 20% advance.
“Boeing is certainly higher and extra steady,” stated Bob Jordan, CEO of all-Boeing airline Southwest Airways, in an interview Dec. 10.
The corporate is scheduled to stipulate its manufacturing plans for 2026 later this month when it studies quarterly outcomes on Jan. 27.
Moving into gear
For Boeing, the current turnaround has taken place largely on the meeting ground.
Underneath Ortberg, the producer has slashed so-called traveled work, through which meeting duties are finished out of order, to keep away from expensive errors. The corporate has made different manufacturing adjustments, as nicely, together with added coaching.
The Nationwide Transportation Security Board in June stated insufficient coaching and administration oversight had been among the many issues on the firm, based on its investigation into what led to the door plug blowout in January 2024.
On Dec. 8, Boeing additionally accomplished its acquisition of fuselage maker Spirit AeroSystems, which Boeing had spun out of the corporate 20 years in the past. It now has extra direct management of the essential provider.
Shifting out jets
Boeing handed over 537 plane within the first 11 months of final yr. It studies December deliveries on Tuesday, however Jefferies estimates the corporate delivered 61 industrial jets final month, 44 of them Boeing’s bestseller, the 737 Max.
Boeing delivered 348 plane in 2024 and 528 in 2023. Final yr’s whole would nonetheless be far off the 806 airplanes it handed over in 2018.
Final October, the FAA raised its manufacturing cap on Boeing’s 737 Max from 38 a month to 42. (The FAA required its sign-off after the door plug accident.) CFO Jay Malave stated at a UBS convention on Dec. 2 that he expects the corporate to get to that price in early 2026. Ortberg informed buyers in October that additional price will increase are on the desk, in increments of 5 planes.
Kelly Ortberg, chief government officer of Boeing Co., throughout a media occasion on the Boeing Supply Heart in Seattle, Washington, US, on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026.
M. Scott Brauer | Bloomberg | Getty Pictures
Handovers to airways in 2026 will doubtless be new manufacturing, in contrast with clearing out older stock, Malave had stated. Boeing can be more likely to produce about eight Dreamliners a month as of early this yr, he added.
Deliveries are key for airplane makers, as a result of airways and different prospects pay the majority of an airplane’s worth after they obtain the plane. Boeing’s chief competitor, Airbus, is scheduled to report 2025 orders and deliveries on Monday.
Nonetheless, a number of planes that have been anticipated to already flying passengers aren’t licensed but, together with the Boeing 777X in addition to the Max 7 and Max 10 variants, depriving Boeing of money and driving up prices.
Southwest is awaiting the delayed Max 7, the smallest airplane of the Max household. The mannequin is necessary for airline routes which have decrease demand so airways can keep away from oversupplying the market with seats, pushing down fares.
Southwest CEO Jordan final month stated that he would not anticipate the airline to fly the Max 7 earlier than the primary half of 2027 as Boeing certification work continues. Boeing at one level anticipated it to enter service in 2019.

Sturdy demand
Orders for each Boeing and Airbus jets look strong, with demand set to proceed outstripping provide into the subsequent decade, Bernstein aerospace analyst Douglas Harned stated in a notice final week.
Airbus outpaced Boeing in deliveries final yr, although Boeing seems to have outsold its European competitor in new orders.
Via November, Boeing logged 1,000 gross orders in contrast with 797 from Airbus. Airline prospects have began to look past this decade, snagging supply slots into the mid-2030s as they plot out progress and worldwide expansions.
Alaska additionally exercised choices for 5 787 Dreamliners for extra worldwide routes simply over a yr after it acquired Hawaiian Airways — a mix that handed Alaska extra Dreamliners and Airbus A330s to achieve for locations that it could not get to earlier than, like Japan, South Korea and Italy.
The wide-body plane market is now selecting up steam, stated Ron Epstein, aerospace analyst at Financial institution of America, with orders beginning to get handed over sooner to prospects.
Worldwide journey, particularly on the excessive finish, has been notably robust within the years after the pandemic as vacationers splash out on holidays all over the world. Increasingly international airways are snagging long-haul jets like Boeing’s Dreamliner and Airbus’ A330 and A350s for the approaching years, heating up the wide-body airplane market, analysts stated.
Globally, airplanes flew almost 84% full in November, the very best degree on document, based on the newest knowledge accessible from the Worldwide Air Transport Affiliation, an airline trade group.
With journey demand nonetheless strong, orders to exchange older jets and safe new ones will proceed to gas progress.
“The magic, if you’ll, of air transportation is till any person comes up with a transporter, you understand, [like] ‘Star Trek,’ the place you kind of vaporize and present up someplace else, we will be flying,” Epstein stated.

