In 2008, Hawaiian Airlines announced an order for six Airbus A350-800 aircraft along with six Airbus A330-200s. The plan was to modernize the airline’s long-haul fleet by combining immediate capacity growth with future efficiency improvements. The A350-800 was intended to serve long-distance routes that did not require the larger capacity of the A350-900.
However, as the Airbus A350 program developed, the smallest variant, the A350-800, failed to attract enough orders. Airlines showed more interest in the larger A350-900, and Airbus eventually decided to cancel the A350-800 program in 2014. This led Hawaiian Airlines to swap its order for six A350-800s with six A330-800neo aircraft, which offered updated engines and avionics but similar capacity.
The A330-800neo also struggled to gain customers beyond Hawaiian, which raised concerns about its residual value and market support. By 2018, Hawaiian Airlines decided to cancel its A330-800neo order and chose the Boeing 787 instead, citing the wider customer base and support network for the 787 family.