Singapore Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8

Singapore Airlines Retires Boeing 737-800s

Singapore Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8

ID 331012778 | 737 © Boarding1now | Dreamstime.com (Photo of Boeing 737 Max 8 pictured, not a Boeing 737-800)

Singapore Airlines will retire its final Boeing 737-800 in the coming days, capping a multi-year transition from inherited SilkAir cabins to a consistent, long-haul-grade experience across the fleet. The last aircraft, 9V-MGN (≈10 years old), is rostered to work short hops from Singapore Changi (SIN) to Kathmandu (KTM) and Penang (PEN) before bowing out on Sunday, October 26, 2025.

Why This Matters

With the 737-800 gone, every SIA aircraft will offer:

It’s a rare level of consistency among global network carriers—and a big win for frequent flyers who value predictability on regional sectors.

Narrowbody Going Forward: 737 MAX 8 Only

SIA’s narrowbody future rests on the Boeing 737 MAX 8 (19 in service, 10 on order). The MAX 8 cabins feature:

How We Got Here

Aircraft Geekery: What’s Leaving, What Stays

  • Boeing 737-800 (ex-SilkAir)

    • Engines: CFM56-7B

    • Cabin: Recliner J, no Wi-Fi, no seatback IFE

    • Role: Short-haul ASEAN/near-regional flying during the integration period

  • Boeing 737 MAX 8 (SIA-spec)

    • Engines: CFM LEAP-1B

    • Cabin: Flat-bed J in a staggered layout, Wi-Fi, seatback IFE

    • Role: Premium regional workhorse pairing with SIA’s widebodies

Network & Customer Impact

  • Product certainty: Booking a short-haul SIA sector now guarantees flat-bed J + Wi-Fi + seatback IFE—even on narrowbodies.

  • Schedule flexibility: The MAX 8’s economics and cabins let SIA deploy long-haul-grade product density on routes like Singapore Changi (SIN)Kathmandu (KTM)/Penang (PEN)/Denpasar (DPS)/Bangkok (BKK)/Ho Chi Minh City (SGN), while widebodies backstop peak banks.

  • Fleet efficiency: One narrowbody type simplifies crew, spares, and maintenance, supporting higher reliability and uniform service standards.

A Quick Look Back: Where The 737-800s Went

At peak, SIA operated nine 737-800s; most have already exited, with several airframes migrating to operators in Australia. The final frame, 9V-MGN, closes the chapter this week.

Bottom Line

Singapore Airlines is retiring its last Boeing 737-800, delivering fleet-wide flat beds, Wi-Fi, and seatback entertainment—a clean, premium standard from regional hops to ultra-long-haul. From next week, if it’s Singapore Airlines, it’s a flat-bed Business Class—even on the short sectors out of Singapore Changi (SIN).