Iran Air has retired its last Airbus A300B4, marking the end of passenger operations for this aircraft type worldwide. The retirement comes after more than 40 years of service for a model that was significant in Airbus' early commercial history.
Industry reports indicate the final commercial flight of Iran Air’s A300B4 took place in June. The aircraft, registered EP-IBG and over 41 years old, joined Iran Air’s fleet in 2006 on lease from ACT Airlines. Over its career, it completed nearly 72,000 flight hours and more than 25,000 cycles on regional routes.
The A300B4's departure leaves only later-model A300-600Rs in Iran Air’s passenger fleet. According to ch-aviation data, the airline now operates about 39 aircraft across several types, including four A300-600Rs—two active and two inactive—with an average age exceeding three decades. Most airlines have retired similar older models due to challenges sourcing parts and maintaining aging jets.