Airbus A320neo family
| A320neo family A319neo/A320neo/A321neo | |
|---|---|
| An A320neo of IndiGo | |
| General information | |
| Role | Narrow-body jet airliner |
| National origin | Multi-national |
| Manufacturer | Airbus |
| Status | In service |
| Primary users | IndiGo |
| Number built | 4,412 as of February 2026 |
| History | |
| Manufactured | 2012–present |
| Introduction date | 25 January 2016, with Lufthansa |
| First flight | September 25, 2014 |
| Developed from | Airbus A320ceo family |
| Variants | |
The Airbus A320neo family is an incremental development of the A320 family of narrow-body airliners produced by Airbus. The A320neo family (neo being Greek for "new", as well as an acronym for "new engine option") is based on the enhanced variant of the previous generation A319, A320, and A321, which was then retroactively renamed the A320ceo family (ceo being an acronym for "current engine option").
Re-engined with CFM International LEAP or Pratt & Whitney PW1000G engines and fitted with sharklet wingtip devices as standard, the A320neo is 15% to 20% more fuel efficient than previous models, the A320ceo. It was launched on 1 December 2010, made its first flight on 25 September 2014 and was introduced by Lufthansa on 25 January 2016.
By 2019, the A320neo had a 60% market share against the competing Boeing 737 MAX; in 2023, the Chinese designed Comac C919 joined these two as another direct competitor. As of February 2026, a total of 11,605 A320neo family aircraft had been ordered by more than 130 customers, of which 4,412 aircraft had been delivered. The global A320neo fleet had completed more than 20 million flights over 44 million block hours with one hull loss being an airport-safety related accident.