Emirates To Add At Least 30 Airbus A350-1000s
Emirates (EK) is in advanced talks to order ≥30 Airbus A350-1000s, with a target announcement at the Dubai Airshow (Nov 17–21, 2025) in Dubai (DXB). The move would mark a notable shift after years of EK skepticism about the A350-1000’s Rolls-Royce Trent XWB-97 engine performance.
Why It Matters
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Fleet balance & risk diversification: EK’s long-haul backbone today is the A380-800 and 777-300ER/200LR. Adding the A350-1000 alongside the incoming 777-9/-8 and 787s spreads manufacturer and program risk while modernizing the sub-A380, high-capacity segment.
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Network flexibility from DXB: The A350-1000’s range and lower fuel burn versus current-gen twins gives EK an efficient tool for dense missions across Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania, and select thinner ultra-long sectors from DXB.
Engine Backdrop
Emirates and regional peers (notably QR) have pressed Rolls-Royce for reliability and maintenance-cost improvements. An EK A350-1000 purchase would signal renewed confidence in the Trent XWB-97 trajectory, complementing EK’s existing A350-900 (XWB-84) operations.
Where The A350-1000 Fits In EK’s Lineup
Current EK widebody snapshot (selected):
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In service: A380-800 (116), 777-300ER (119), 777-200LR (10), A350-900 (13)
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On order: A350-900 (52), 777-9 (170), 777-8 (35), 787-8 (20), 787-10 (15)
Role for A350-1000:
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Slot between 777-300ER and future 777-9 in capacity and economics
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Provide a lighter, lower-trip-cost alternative for high-yield long-haul where A380 is too large
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Accelerate 777-300ER retirement and reduce unit costs on long sectors from DXB
A350 Operations Today At Emirates
EK’s A350-900 already serves nine destinations from DXB with Business / Premium Economy / Economy cabins and 4K IFE. The A350-1000 would extend that platform with more seats and payload while retaining the passenger-friendly A350 cabin (higher humidity, lower cabin altitude).
What To Watch Next
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Engine support terms: Any deal will likely hinge on power-by-the-hour and durability guarantees from Rolls-Royce.
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Seat map reveal: Expect Business + Premium Economy to feature prominently, aligning with EK’s successful premium-leisure strategy.
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Entry-into-service phasing: Timelines to dovetail with 777-9 arrivals and ongoing A380 cabin refresh/retirements.
Bottom Line
If finalized at the Dubai Airshow, an Emirates order for at least 30 A350-1000s would be a watershed, pairing EK’s scale with Airbus’s largest A350 to fine-tune DXB-centric long-haul economics. It diversifies EK’s future widebody mix, signals improved confidence in Trent XWB-97 support, and gives the carrier a versatile, lower-trip-cost complement to the A380 and incoming 777-9.


