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| Rolls-Royce Engine |
Rolls-Royce engine deliveries fell in 2025 as the UK jet engine manufacturer aligned output with slower airframe production schedules at Airbus and Boeing. The company delivered 483 engines, down from 529 in 2024 and below its guidance of 540-570 deliveries.
Rolls-Royce engine deliveries were split between 259 large engines and 224 business aviation and regional engines. The decline reflects ongoing aerospace supply chain constraints, where airframe build rates remain limited by parts shortages, engine availability, and production bottlenecks across the wider aviation manufacturing base.
However, Rolls-Royce still delivered stronger civil aerospace revenue. Revenue rose by 15pc year on year to £10.38bn, supported mainly by a 21pc increase in services and 3pc growth in original equipment. This shows how aftermarket demand can offset weaker new engine deliveries when airlines keep older aircraft in service for longer.
Shop Visits Rise as Airlines Extend Existing Fleet Use
Aircraft engine aftermarket activity strengthened as airlines delayed fleet renewal because of aircraft delivery constraints. Rolls-Royce total shop visits rose by 10pc to 1,440 in 2025 from 1,313 a year earlier.
Large engine major shop visits increased to 517 from 430 in 2024. This reflects heavier maintenance needs as carriers operate existing widebody fleets for longer. For Rolls-Royce, this increases service revenue and improves cash generation even when original equipment delivery volumes fall.
The trend also highlights a deeper aerospace supply chain issue. Delays in new aircraft deliveries do not remove demand for engine capacity. They shift part of that demand into maintenance, repair, overhaul, spare parts, and life-extension work.
Large Engine Backlog Strengthens Long-Term Visibility
Rolls-Royce strengthened its large engine order book despite weaker 2025 deliveries. The company extended its large engine backlog to 2,207 units after booking 638 large engine orders during the year.
Demand remained especially strong for Airbus widebody engine platforms. Rolls-Royce booked 226 orders for the Trent XWB-97, which powers the Airbus A350-1000, and 212 orders for the Trent 7000, used on the Airbus A330neo. These orders support long-term visibility for high-value engine production and aftermarket services.
The company expects 550-600 total original equipment deliveries in 2026 and 1,480-1,550 total shop visits. Rolls-Royce also continues to improve engine durability. The second phase of high-pressure turbine blade improvements for the Trent 1000 and Trent 7000 was certified in December, while XWB-97 improvements remain on track for completion by the end of 2027.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Rolls-Royce’s results show that aerospace demand remains strong, but production capacity is still constrained by the supply chain. For metals suppliers, the key signal is continued demand for nickel superalloys, titanium components, turbine blades, forgings, and repair materials tied to both new engines and aftermarket growth.

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