RTX Engine Deliveries Rise as Airbus Ramp-Up Drives New-Build Focus

RTX engine deliveries are set to rise in 2026 as Airbus ramp-up shifts output toward new aircraft builds.
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RTX Engine Deliveries Rise as Airbus Ramp-Up Drives New-Build Focus
RTX

RTX engine deliveries are set to rise in 2026 as the company shifts more output toward new aircraft builds. RTX expects large commercial engine shipments to increase by a mid-to-high single-digit rate from 2025 levels. That follows deliveries of 1,055 large commercial engines last year. As a result, RTX engine deliveries are becoming a more direct measure of Airbus ramp-up progress.

This shift matters because Pratt & Whitney supports key Airbus programs. Its engines mainly serve the A320neo and A220 families. RTX said the split between new-build installs and aftermarket shipments will favor new aircraft in 2026. Therefore, RTX engine deliveries will increasingly track airframe production rather than spare engine demand.

The company is making this move while aftermarket demand remains strong. Airlines still fly older fleets longer because new aircraft deliveries remain delayed. However, RTX now wants more of its engine output directed toward Airbus assembly lines. Consequently, the market will watch whether RTX engine deliveries can support higher narrowbody build rates without weakening service support.

Pratt & Whitney Supply Chain Expansion Is Becoming the Key Enabler

Pratt & Whitney supply chain capacity is now central to this delivery plan. RTX said it is expanding forgings and castings capacity to ease production bottlenecks. Those investments are designed to support Airbus as it pushes toward much higher monthly output targets. As a result, internal supply chain execution is becoming as important as final engine assembly.

The company has already committed major capital to this effort. RTX announced a $206mn expansion in Columbus, Georgia, covering engine MRO, nickel and titanium forgings, and compressor blade production. It also announced a $285mn investment in Asheville, North Carolina, to expand turbine blade castings. Therefore, RTX is reinforcing the upstream parts base that supports future engine growth.

These additions will not deliver full benefits immediately. RTX said the Asheville casting project remains in the build-up phase. Management also highlighted work on yields to ensure efficient production when output rises further. Meanwhile, a new powder metal tower and forging press are expected within the next 24 months. That means the supply chain still has execution risk even as capacity grows.

Airbus Ramp-Up Will Test Engine Flow and Material Discipline

Airbus ramp-up will put real pressure on engine delivery discipline. The aircraft maker wants to raise A320neo production to 75 aircraft per month by 2027. It also wants to lift A220 production to 12 aircraft per month this year. Therefore, RTX engine deliveries must improve not only in volume, but also in timing and consistency.

That challenge is already visible in recent numbers. Fourth-quarter large commercial engine shipments rose 12pc year on year to 312 units. RTX benefited from Airbus’ year-end push to meet its revised outlook. However, the market still sees engine shortages as one of the main constraints on narrowbody production. Consequently, 2026 will be a test of whether RTX can move from recovery to reliable support.

RTX’s broader results show it has momentum. Defense engine deliveries rose strongly in 2025, while Pratt & Whitney Canada also posted modest growth. Profit and revenue both increased over the year. Even so, the most strategic question remains clear. Can RTX engine deliveries rise fast enough to support Airbus without creating new strain elsewhere in the system?

The Metalnomist Commentary

RTX is no longer just solving a delivery backlog. It is rebuilding the industrial base behind future engine flow. If forgings, castings, and yield improvements hold, RTX could become one of the key enablers of the next aerospace production upcycle.

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