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AerospaceBlogsLufthansa Begins Overhaul Of Airbus A380 Superjumbos But Not With The Airline’s Blighted Allegris Seats
Lufthansa Begins Overhaul Of Airbus A380 Superjumbos But Not With The Airline’s Blighted Allegris Seats
Aerospace

Lufthansa Begins Overhaul Of Airbus A380 Superjumbos But Not With The Airline’s Blighted Allegris Seats

•January 30, 2026
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Paddleyourownkanoo
Paddleyourownkanoo•Jan 30, 2026

Why It Matters

By choosing certified, readily available seats, Lufthansa accelerates A380 return‑to‑service and avoids costly certification delays, impacting its premium‑cabin revenue and fleet modernization timeline.

Key Takeaways

  • •First A380 retrofit begins at Dresden’s Elbe Flugzeugwerke
  • •Lufthansa replaces Allegris seats with Thompson Vantage XL business seats
  • •Business class falls to 68 seats from 78
  • •Retrofit program slated for completion by mid‑2027
  • •Common Vantage XL seats simplify maintenance across Lufthansa Group

Pulse Analysis

Lufthansa’s A380 overhaul marks a pivotal moment for the carrier’s long‑haul strategy. After more than two years of planning, the German airline sent its first 15‑year‑old superjumbo to Elbe Flugzeugwerke for a comprehensive two‑month retrofit. The work includes structural updates, cabin refreshes, and a new interior layout that will see the aircraft rejoin the Munich hub in April. This phased program, covering all eight A380s, is scheduled to finish by mid‑2027, ensuring the fleet remains viable amid a shifting market for ultra‑large aircraft.

The decision to abandon the in‑house Allegris business‑class concept in favor of Thompson’s Vantage XL seats reflects Lufthansa’s pragmatic response to certification bottlenecks. Allegris, introduced in 2017, has struggled with regulatory approvals and delayed rollouts on A350s, 787s, and 747‑8s, leaving premium cabins underutilized. Vantage XL, already certified and used by carriers such as Qantas, offers a 1‑2‑1 direct‑aisle configuration that matches the space efficiency of the legacy layout while simplifying the approval process. Custom dark‑blue upholstery maintains brand consistency, though advanced features like seat‑integrated cooling and tablet controls are omitted.

From a business perspective, the seat swap trims business‑class capacity to 68 seats per A380, a modest reduction that may modestly affect high‑margin revenue but improves turnaround speed and maintenance commonality across Lufthansa’s Group subsidiaries, including Discover Airways and Edelweiss. The standardized cabin also eases crew training and parts inventory, delivering cost efficiencies. As airlines reassess the economics of the A380, Lufthansa’s refurbishment strategy underscores a shift toward operational reliability and regulatory agility over bespoke luxury, positioning the carrier to better navigate the evolving premium‑travel landscape.

Lufthansa Begins Overhaul Of Airbus A380 Superjumbos But Not With The Airline’s Blighted Allegris Seats

More than two years after announcing it planned to carry out multi-million-dollar upgrades of its Airbus A380 superjumbo fleet, Lufthansa has finally announced a date for when the planes will start to go into the hangar for top-to-tail refurbishments.

On Friday, the German flag carrier revealed that the first of its eight-strong fleet of double-deck A380s will head to the Elbe Flugzeugwerke maintenance company in Dresden for two months of extensive retrofit work.

a close up of a plane

Lufthansa’s Airbus A380 will be undergoing extensive refurbishment works over the next year and a half.

Set to rejoin Lufthansa’s fleet in Munich in April, the 15-year-old aircraft (registration: D-AIMC) won’t, however, return with the airline’s flagship ‘Allegris’ Business Class seats on board.

This won’t come as much of a surprise to anyone who has been following Lufthansa’s ill-fated rollout of the long-haul passenger experience concept dubbed ‘Allegris,’ which features fully bespoke First and Business Class seats designed by and for Lufthansa.

The concept was first envisaged back in 2017, but after a series of embarrassing setbacks and delays, Allegris only rolled out on a Lufthansa Airbus A350 for the first time in May 2024.

Even then, the first plane had to be deployed without any First Class suites because the seats still weren’t ready, and problems continue to plague the program:

  • Most Allegris Business Class seats on newly delivered Boeing 787 Dreamliners still aren’t certified, meaning that Lufthansa is deploying these aircraft with its most lucrative cabin almost empty.

  • The Boeing 747-8 jumbojets in the Lufthansa fleet might only have Allegris seats on the main deck, with Business Class seats on the upper deck substituted for an off-the-shelf product.

Lufthansa has also opted against installing Allegris on its A380 superjumbos, and the decision comes partly down to how long it would take to get aviation safety regulators to certify the bespoke seats for use on the plane.

Instead, the airline has confirmed it has plucked an off-the-shelf Business Class made by Northern Irish-based manufacturer Thompson Aero Seating, known as the Vantage XL.

a row of seats in an airplanea seat in a plane

Lufthansa is replacing its old 2-2-2 configured Business Class seats with Thompson Vantage XL seats that have direct-aisle-access.


As the Vantage XL has been used by a number of international carriers, including Australian airline Qantas on its own A380s, the seats don’t need their own approvals

In other words, Lufthansa can install the seats and get the plane back into service without waiting for a lengthy certification process to be completed.

Lufthansa customers might already be familiar with the Thompson Vantage XL seat as it was already installed on several second-hand Boeing 787 Dreamliners that the airline acquired from the Philippines Airlines.

The Vantage XL has also been picked by the Lufthansa Group for upgrade programs on its leisure subsidiaries, Discover Airways and Edelweiss, so there will be a fair amount of commonality, which should make ongoing maintenance easier.

Given that the 1-2-1 configuration of the all-direct-aisle-access Vantage XL seats is as space efficient as Lufthansa’s old Business Class, the reconfigured Airbus A380s will return to service with slightly fewer seats.

There will still be eight First Class seats, 52 Premium Economy Seats, and 371 seats in Economy, but the number of Business Class seats will drop from the current 78 to 68.

Lufthansa has customized its version of the Vantage XL seats in its standard dark blue fabric, alongside grey and beige surrounds. Some of the features of the Allegris seats will not be present, including integrated seat cooling and heating, as well as a tablet to control all of the seat functions.

Lufthansa doesn’t expect to complete the retrofit program of all eight A380s until mid-2027.

The post Lufthansa Begins Overhaul Of Airbus A380 Superjumbos But Not With The Airline’s Blighted Allegris Seats appeared first on PYOK.

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