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VietJet receives first Boeing 737 MAX after years-long delay

VietJet receives first Boeing 737 MAX after years-long delay
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CEO Kelly Ortberg | Boeing

VietJet is preparing to receive its first Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft this weekend, marking a significant step in the airline's fleet diversification strategy. The delivery ceremony will take place at Boeing's Renton facility on Sunday and will be attended by Vietnam's president Luong Cuong. President Cuong is also scheduled to speak at the UN General Assembly in New York two days later.

This delivery is the first of 200 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft that VietJet has ordered. Until now, the Vietnamese low-cost carrier has operated an all-Airbus fleet of over 120 aircraft, including A320s, A321s, and A330s. The decision to introduce Boeing planes aligns with Vietnam's broader strategy to increase US investments as negotiations with Washington over tariffs continue.

VietJet initially placed an order for 100 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft in May 2016 during a signing ceremony held at Hanoi's Presidential Palace, coinciding with then-US President Barack Obama's state visit. The airline expanded its order by another 100 aircraft at the Farnborough Air Show in 2018. Deliveries were originally planned between 2019 and 2023 but were delayed due to the global grounding of the MAX series, the COVID-19 pandemic, and production issues at Boeing.

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The delays have allowed VietJet to adjust its order according to its network growth plans. The current order includes 100 high-density MAX 8-200 variants from the original deal, along with an additional 20 standard MAX 8s and 80 larger MAX 10 models that are still awaiting certification.

According to information reported by the Bangkok Post, VietJet intends for Thai VietJet—its subsidiary—to receive the first deliveries, with a total of twelve aircraft initially assigned out of fifty planned for this branch. CEO Nguyen Thi Phong Thao commented on how these new planes fit into VietJet’s expansion plans: "The deal for 200 Boeing 737 MAX airplanes is an important move for us to keep up with our international flight network expansion plan with a higher capacity. It's all part of offering our passengers more exciting experiences when being able to fly to new international destinations."

Since its launch in 2011 as Vietnam’s first privately-owned airline, VietJet has grown its Airbus fleet steadily. At this year’s Paris Air Show, it ordered an additional 150 A321neo jets—a move that will bring its total number of A321neos above two hundred once delivered. For long-haul operations, VietJet currently uses eight A330-300s acquired from AirAsia X and has committed to purchasing forty A330-900 widebody jets following orders placed last year and doubled this May.

As of September 2025, VietJet operates a mixed fleet comprising various Airbus models and two Comac C909 regional jets wet-leased from Chengdu Airlines for service to Vietnam’s Con Dao islands—routes only accessible by regional jets due to airport constraints. This arrangement makes VietJet the first airline outside China operating Airbus, Boeing, and Comac aircraft simultaneously.

The timing of these deliveries comes as Vietnam faces ongoing trade negotiations with the United States over tariffs imposed last month by the previous administration—a measure not formally acknowledged as bilateral by Hanoi but seen as critical given that more than one-third of Vietnamese exports go to US markets (https://www.chathamhouse.org/2024/07/vietnam-us-tariffs-trade). Aviation purchases like those made by VietJet are viewed as key elements in balancing trade relations between both countries; combined orders from VietJet and Vietnam Airlines represent investments exceeding $30 billion in American-made Boeing products.

"The deal for 200 Boeing 737 MAX airplanes is an important move for us to keep up with our international flight network expansion plan with a higher capacity. It's all part of offering our passengers more exciting experiences when being able to fly to new international destinations." — Nguyen Thi Phong Thao, CEO of VietJet

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