Airbus Jets Get Mandatory Crack-Hunting Orders
Published Date: 11/28/2025
Rule
Summary
If you own or operate certain Airbus A319, A320, or A321 planes, the FAA has updated safety rules to keep you flying safe. They’re adding regular checks for cracks in key parts of the plane and fixing them if needed, starting January 2, 2026. These inspections might cost some time and money but will help prevent bigger problems down the runway.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
New Repetitive Inspections Required
If you own or operate the specified Airbus A318/A319/A320/A321 models, you must begin repetitive inspections for cracking at frame (FR) 35 (and FR 35.8 for A321) and stringer (STGR) 30 starting with this AD effective January 2, 2026. If any cracking is found, the crack must be repaired before further flight using an FAA-, EASA-, or Airbus-DOA-approved method.
FAA Cost Estimates for U.S. Operators
The FAA estimates this AD affects 1,922 U.S.-registered airplanes. The FAA estimates retained actions cost up to 21 work-hours per airplane (at $85/hr) — up to $1,785 per product and up to $3,430,770 total — and the new actions cost up to 11 work-hours per airplane (at $85/hr) — up to $935 per product and up to $1,797,070 total; on-condition repair costs are not estimated and some costs may be covered by warranty.
Modification Ends Repetitive Inspections
You may stop the repetitive inspections for affected airplanes by doing the specified modification to the forward pressure bulkhead at the frame coupling (FR 35 / STGR 30, and FR 35.8 for A321) as described in EASA AD 2024-0147R1. That modification is identified as the terminating action for the repetitive inspections.
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