Delta TechOps wins IndiGo CFM engine deal in first push into India

MRO IndiGo Airbus A320neo aircraft
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Delta TechOps has signed an exclusive eight-year agreement with IndiGo to maintain 20 CFM56-5B engines, giving Delta’s MRO business its first foothold in India and another step forward in its push to build a much larger third-party maintenance business.

The engines power IndiGo’s Airbus A320ceo fleet, and Delta said the work will be performed at its main maintenance base in Atlanta.

The partnership, announced on April 22, 2026, at MRO Americas in Orlando, marks Delta TechOps’ first major collaboration with IndiGo and establishes a presence for the company in the world’s third-largest aviation market.

In an interview at MRO Americas 2026, Marc Meredith, Senior Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer of Delta TechOps, described the company’s broader growth push and explained why the IndiGo agreement fits that strategy.

“India represents one of the most dynamic, fastest-growing aviation markets in the world, and this partnership positions Delta TechOps at the center of that growth,” Meredith said. He added that high-utilization fleets require “reliability, scale and consistent execution,” the case Delta is making as it tries to win more outside engine work.

That push comes with bigger financial ambitions, Meredith said. Delta TechOps posted its best quarter ever in the first quarter of 2026, with MRO revenue more than doubling from a year earlier, and expects to top $1 billion in revenue in 2026. Meredith said the business is targeting $2 billion to $3 billion in the next few years and sees a path to $5 billion longer term.

Meredith acknowledged that the $5 billion goal is ambitious, but said the opportunity is there if Delta TechOps executes. He said the company’s real competitive advantage lies in its people, arguing that the experience, technical skill and operational discipline inside TechOps give Delta an edge as it expands its third-party business.

Delta recently hired Meredith from Pratt & Whitney and highlighted the move in its full-year 2025 results as part of an effort to strengthen TechOps’ MRO leadership team. The company has also been expanding its engine credentials. In March 2026, Delta TechOps said it had become the first North American airline MRO with full support capability for both the LEAP-1A and LEAP-1B, extending beyond its long-established CFM56 work.

Meredith said Delta TechOps does not view the IndiGo agreement as a one-off transaction, but rather as a template for similar third-party deals as it expands its commercial reach. He said the company sees partnerships like this one as a way to enter new markets, prove its model with outside customers and build momentum for additional engine and shop work over time.

He also said Delta TechOps is using a mix of internal expansion and outside partnerships to pursue its growth targets. Atlanta remains the near-term center of that effort, Meredith said, but the company is also evaluating broader cooperation structures and other options that could help it scale faster as it pushes beyond $1 billion in annual revenue.

For IndiGo, the deal adds outside support for part of a large A320ceo fleet as the carrier continues to expand at home and abroad. IndiGo operates more than 400 aircraft on more than 2,200 daily flights and carried 124 million passengers in 2025.

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