Air Canada is the flag carrier of Canada and is easily the largest airline north of the US border. Air Canada is a founding member of the Star Alliance , and its main hub is at Toronto Pearson International Airport , with major hubs also at Montréal–Trudeau International Airport and Vancouver International Airport . The carrier accounts for around 50% of the market share at these leading Canadian airports.
Here is what to know about Air Canada's performance in 2024 by the numbers. Air Canada's fleet Air Canada operates a fleet of Airbus A320, Boeing MAX, and Airbus A220 narrowbody aircraft. The Airbus A220 was developed by Canada's Bombardier as the CSeries.
However, the financial strain forced Bombardier to sell it to Airbus and exit the commercial passenger aircraft market. While the program is now owned by a European company, it retains much of its Canadian DNA, with much of the production work done in Canada. Air Canada's widebody fleet consists of Airbus A330s, Boeing 777s, and Boeing 787 Dreamliners.
The core Air Canada brand has a total of 118 narrowbody aircraft in inventory along with 92 widebody aircraft. It has another 42 narrowbody and 18 widebody aircraft on order. The core Air Canada brand has no regional jets or turboprops in its inventory.
Adding in Air Canada's divisions (Air Canada Cargo, Air Canada Express, Air Canada Jetz, and Air Canada Rouge) , the group's fleet is made up of around 353 passenger aircraft. That is over a third the number of the Unite.
