If you are flying on a regional flight in the U.S. today, chances are it's on an Embraer E-Jet.
The E-Jet family — the E170 and E175, specifically — make up about half of the 1,367 regional jets that were flying for Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines at the end of 2023, their respective fleet plans show. Other less common models include Mitsubishi's, and formerly Bombardier's, CRJ family and Embraer's older ERJ family.
The E-Jets are so popular — it helps that there's no competing plane in production — that American ordered another 90 E175s in March to complement the more than 240 already in its American Eagle fleet. Not bad for a plane that first flew more than 20 years ago.
"The 175-E1 is still a great aircraft for the U.S.," Arjan Meijer, president and CEO of Embraer Commercial, said at an investor event in New York on Monday. "We believe there is a tremendous market ahead of us."
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That market includes replacing older 50-seat aircraft, particularly CRJ200s and ERJ-145s, as they disappear from U.S. skies. Delta affiliates flew their last CRJ200 flight in December 2023, schedule data from aviation analytics firm Cirium Diio shows. United plans to retire the 50-seat models at its affiliates in the next few years and American by the end of the decade.
Meijer could not give an exact number of planes Embraer hopes to sell, as the replacement of 50-seat regional jets will not be one-for-one due to pilot contract limits. But, he said, the market for E175-size planes is substantial given that many destinations across the U.S. are too small for larger planes like the Airbus A320neo and Boeing 737 MAX families.
Regardless of the numbers, one thing is clear: U.S. flyers can expect to see E175s on regular rotation through the 2030s — and probably well into the 2040s.
That's both good and bad news for Embraer. While continued E175 sales are a positive for the Brazilian plane-maker's bottom line, they come at the expense of its next generation of E-Jets, known as the E2, that were developed to replace the original models.
According to the company, the E175-E2 offers double-digit fuel efficiency gains over the E175, also known as the E175-E1, plus more range and slightly more seats. The updated plane seats 80 passengers, rather than 76, in the two-class configuration that is standard at U.S. regionals.
Despite those performance gains, the E175-E2 has yet to notch a single firm order from the U.S. The lack of deals prompted Embraer in 2022 to delay certification of the plane to 2027 or 2028, at least three years later than planned.
The lack of interest is the result of strict rules in the pilot
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Black Friday and Travel Tuesday may have come and gone, but travelers still have plenty of ways to save on an upcoming flight. Norse Atlantic Airways, a growing low-cost carrier that operates flights between the United States and Europe, recently published dozens of discounted round-trip fares starting at $317. Travelers can score deals on flights out of New York, Orlando, Las Vegas, and more U.S. cities to popular European destinations such as Athens, London, and Rome. Best of all, the discounted fares can be booked now for travel throughout 2025. For example, travelers can snag a $395 round-trip economy ticket from New York (JFK) to London (LGW) between October 1, 2025 through October 11, 2025, or a spring break getaway between Orlando, FL (MCO) and London (LGW) in April 2025.Travel + Leisure spotted a variety of round-trip deals including:
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