TOULOUSE, France, December 4, 2025: Airbus has announced plans to inspect more than 600 of its A320-family aircraft after identifying a supplier-related quality issue affecting fuselage panels, marking the latest production setback for the world’s largest commercial jet manufacturer. The European plane maker said the problem involves exterior fuselage panels that did not meet thickness specifications during manufacturing. The components, primarily located near the upper fuselage crown and forward door sections, were supplied by Sofitec Aero, a manufacturing partner based in Seville, Spain.

Airbus confirmed that the flaw originated from a material stretching and milling process and that all future panels have since been verified to meet required standards. According to Airbus, a total of 628 aircraft are potentially affected by the issue. Of these, 168 are already in commercial service, 245 are in final assembly, and 215 are in earlier stages of production. While the company emphasized that the anomaly poses no immediate safety risk, it has begun precautionary inspections across its global fleet and production lines to ensure continued compliance with quality and safety requirements.
Airbus described the issue as contained but acknowledged that the inspections could disrupt production and delivery schedules. The manufacturer has been targeting about 820 jet deliveries for 2025, a goal that now faces pressure as quality checks temporarily slow assembly operations. The company said its November delivery performance was lower than expected, partly due to the ongoing inspections, and that delivery timelines for December remain under review. Inspection procedures are expected to take only a few hours for most aircraft, but replacement or repair work on panels found to be noncompliant could take up to several weeks.
Airbus confirms supplier-linked flaw in A320 fuselage panels
Such delays may further strain Airbus’s tightly scheduled A320 production system, which supplies airlines worldwide with the single-aisle aircraft that form the backbone of global short- and medium-haul fleets. The A320 family, which includes the A319, A320, and A321 variants, remains Airbus’s highest-volume product line and the main competitor to Boeing’s 737 series. The manufacturer has been increasing monthly production rates to meet strong demand, particularly for the fuel-efficient A320neo model. However, recurring supply chain challenges and quality-control reviews have slowed the ramp-up in recent quarters.
This latest quality concern follows a separate software-related recall earlier this year that affected about 6,000 A320-family aircraft. That issue required a flight-control software update to address a potential vulnerability related to solar radiation interference. Airbus has since completed the software campaign, which did not affect flight safety or cause operational grounding. The company said the current fuselage panel inspections are being coordinated closely with aviation authorities and affected airlines. While the scope of rework remains limited, Airbus noted that its priority is maintaining the highest manufacturing standards across all production sites and suppliers.
Inspection timeline could stretch to several weeks per jet
Sofitec Aero, the supplier involved, is cooperating fully with Airbus on the inspection and verification process. Airbus is continuing to assess any potential financial implications from the inspections but indicated that the impact will primarily concern delivery scheduling rather than long-term production capacity. The company reaffirmed that all new fuselage panels now entering the production system meet technical requirements and that it does not anticipate a recurrence of the problem.
The A320 family has been a central pillar of Airbus’s success for more than three decades, with over 10,000 aircraft delivered worldwide. The current inspections represent a proactive quality-assurance step, underscoring the manufacturer’s focus on maintaining reliability and regulatory compliance as production scales up to meet post-pandemic demand. – By EuroWire News Desk.
