
The cash infusion improves Spirit’s debt position and accelerates its fleet rationalisation, giving creditors a clearer recovery path while positioning the carrier for a leaner post‑bankruptcy operation.
Spirit Aviation Holdings entered its second Chapter 11 filing with more than 200 aircraft, a portfolio that quickly became a liability as operating costs outpaced cash flow. After an aborted $519 million deal with GA Telesis, the ultra‑low‑cost carrier is now turning to a court‑supervised auction to unlock liquidity. By trimming its owned fleet from 48 Airbus narrow‑bodies to just 28, Spirit hopes to emerge leaner, with a revised plan that relies heavily on leased aircraft. The move reflects a broader trend of distressed airlines shedding capital‑intensive assets to preserve cash.
The upcoming sale includes thirteen A320‑200s and seven A321‑200s, each equipped with V2500 engines and priced at $26.5 million and $27 million respectively. CSDS Asset Management has been named the stalking‑horse buyer, but the bidding process remains open until April 1, with the auction slated for April 20. Deliveries will occur in five lots, the first four arriving within 45 days of court approval and the final two after 150 days. The “as‑is, where‑is” condition transfers maintenance and storage responsibilities to the purchaser, further reducing Spirit’s overhead.
The transaction adds roughly $533 million of cash to Spirit’s restructuring fund, a figure that could significantly improve its debt‑to‑equity ratio and give creditors a clearer recovery path. For the secondary market, the influx of 20 Airbus narrow‑bodies bolsters supply at a time when airlines are cautiously expanding capacity post‑pandemic. Potential buyers range from leasing firms seeking to replenish their portfolios to emerging carriers looking for cost‑effective growth. Ultimately, Spirit’s fleet rationalisation may sharpen competition among U.S. ultra‑low‑cost carriers by lowering its cost base and enabling a more focused route strategy.
Spirit Aviation Holdings, the parent of Spirit Airlines, has filed for court approval to sell 20 Airbus aircraft for at least USD 533 million. The stalking-horse buyer is CSDS Asset Management LLC, with an auction set for 20 April 2026. The sale is part of Spirit's Chapter 11 restructuring to reduce costs and emerge with a smaller fleet.
Source: ch-aviation News
Spirit Airlines seeks approval to sell 20 aircraft
By Daniel Martinez Garbuno – 16 Feb 2026
Spirit Aviation Holdings, the parent entity of Spirit Airlines (NK, Fort Lauderdale International), is seeking authorisation from the Chapter 11 bankruptcy court to sell thirteen owned A320‑200s and seven owned A321‑200s via bidding as part of its ongoing financial restructuring. The company aims to raise at least USD 533 million from the sale.
An auction is scheduled for 20 April 2026, with the deadline to participate in the bidding on 1 April. The current “stalking‑horse” buyer is CSDS Asset Management LLC, which can be outbid if larger offers are presented.
Chief Financial Officer Fred Cromer said the company is contemplating the sale of all aircraft to a single buyer because it is “critical to maximising value for the debtors estates,” in a statement made before the court.
The ultra‑low‑cost carrier owns forty‑eight Airbus aircraft. As part of its revised business plan, it has been actively marketing twenty of these to “optimise the fleet and monetise certain assets” and improve its financial position. Removing them from the fleet will reduce related labour, maintenance, storage, flying, and other associated costs.
Spirit entered its latest Chapter 11 process with a fleet of over 200 aircraft. It now expects to emerge with a fleet of 94 Airbus narrow‑bodies (28 owned and 66 leased), according to a filing.
All aircraft to be bid were previously included in a now‑failed sale to GA Telesis. In October 2024, Spirit had sought to sell twenty‑three A320 and A321 aircraft to GA Telesis for USD 519 million as part of its first Chapter 11 bankruptcy procedure. That sale was eventually cancelled, with only three aircraft removed from Spirit’s fleet: A320‑200 N632NK (msn 6331), A320‑200 N695NK (msn 8696), and A321‑200 N657NK (msn 6672).
According to the terms between Spirit and CSDS Asset Management, all aircraft will be delivered “as is, where is” and “with all faults” conditions.
Aircraft to be sold (all equipped with V2500 engines):
N694NK (msn 8632)
N638NK (msn 6463)
N639NK (msn 6487)
N650NK (msn 7724)
N649NK (msn 7679)
N647NK (msn 7635)
N658NK (msn 6736)
N696NK (msn 8824)
N693NK (msn 8659)
N692NK (msn 8611)
N682NK (msn 7957)
N681NK (msn 7908)
N678NK (msn 7857)
N675NK (msn 7668)
N674NK (msn 7462)
N640NK (msn 6507)
N642NK (msn 6586)
N691NK (msn 8614)
N673NK (msn 3795)
N641NK (msn 6566)
All A320‑200s are priced at USD 26.5 million each and all A321‑200s at USD 27 million each.
The aircraft will be delivered to the buyer in five separate lots. The first four lots will arrive 45 days after the entry of the sale‑approval order, and the fifth lot—comprising two aircraft—will be delivered 150 days after the order.
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