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Air India has inducted its first retrofitted Boeing 787-8 as part of a roughly $400 million programme to modernise its legacy widebody fleet.
The aircraft (VT-ANT), which landed in New Delhi on April 13, was overhauled at Boeing’s Modification Center in Victorville, California, and repainted in San Bernardino.
The cabin has been reconfigured from two classes to three — 20 business suites, 25 premium-economy seats and 205 economy seats (about 250 total) — and fitted with new seats, inflight entertainment, LED lighting, refreshed galleys and lavatories.
Air India says the first retrofit took 45 days and ~12,825 manhours.
The carrier expects another seven to eight B787-8s to be completed this year and says around 25 more 787s are in the programme; management aims to finish B787-8 retrofits by Q1 2028.
However, company executives and independent reporting note broader legacy-widebody work — including planned B777 retrofits starting in H2 2027 — may be extended to 2029 amid supply-chain and certification delays.
Air India operates roughly 185–190 aircraft, including some 26 legacy 787-8s and several 787-9s.






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