Qantas welcomed its tenth and final Airbus A380 aircraft back to Sydney on December 2, 2025, ending a nearly six-year storage period that began during the COVID pandemic. The return of the aircraft, named after Qantas founder Paul McGinness, represents the completion of what the airline calls the largest maintenance project in its 105-year history.
The aircraft will initially serve as an operational spare during the Christmas travel period. Starting January 1, 2026, it will enter regular service on the Sydney to Dallas route, enabling daily A380 operations on that connection.
Extensive maintenance program
Returning the superjumbo to service required substantial work. According to Qantas, maintenance and engineering teams from multiple locations completed more than 100,000 hours of work on the aircraft. The process included comprehensive engineering checks, heavy maintenance procedures, landing gear replacement, and a complete cabin renovation.
Parts for the restoration arrived via land, sea and air transport. The aircraft also underwent assessment flights before being cleared to return to commercial service.
Cam Wallace, Qantas International CEO, acknowledged the scale of the undertaking, saying: “Bringing an A380 back into service after nearly six years in storage is no small feat. Teams of engineers around the globe came together to complete more than 100,000 hours of work to prepare the aircraft for flying again, from extensive checks to heavy maintenance, landing gear replacement, a full cabin refresh and assessment flying, with parts shipped by land, sea and sky.”
“When this aircraft lands today it will have been nearly 2,000 days since it last touched Australian soil, and we’re proud to return it to the skies,” he added.
Fleet restoration complete
Qantas has progressively returned its A380 fleet to service over the past several years. Each of the ten aircraft underwent similar extensive engineering assessments and cabin refurbishments before rejoining operations.
The Australian flag carrier’s A380s carried over one million passengers on international routes last year. Wallace noted passenger preference for the aircraft type: “We know our customers love our A380 aircraft and last year our superjumbo fleet carried over one million people on our international network,” he said. “The return of our final A380 means we can offer even more seats on popular long-haul routes to destinations like Dallas, Singapore and Johannesburg.”
Cabin configuration and enhancements
Each Qantas A380 features 14 First Class seats, 70 Business Class seats, 60 Premium Economy seats, and 341 Economy seats. Every aircraft in the fleet has received updated cabins, including refurbished First Class sections, renovated upper deck lounges, and additional premium seating in Business and Premium Economy.
Qantas recently announced further enhancements for First Class passengers on A380 flights, including upgraded dining options, exclusive Aesop amenity kits, Bollinger champagne, and redesigned sleepwear.
Network impact
The addition of the final A380 to active service allows Qantas to operate daily A380 flights between Sydney and Dallas, increasing international capacity. The aircraft will also serve routes to Singapore and Johannesburg.
Through its partnership with American Airlines, the Dallas service provides connections to more than 230 destinations across the US.
The completion of the A380 restoration program marks the end of a significant chapter in Qantas’s pandemic recovery, with the airline’s full superjumbo fleet now back in operation for the first time since early 2020.
