2026-04713Proposed RuleWallet

Airbus Seats Get Bolt Upgrade to Avoid Mid-Flight Wobbles

Published Date: 3/10/2026

Proposed Rule

Summary

The FAA wants to fix a safety problem on certain Airbus A318 to A321 airplanes because some bolts in seat rails have been breaking. They’re proposing to replace nylon bushes with stronger bronze ones and stop using the old parts. Airlines need to comment by April 24, 2026, and get ready for these changes, which could cost some time and money but will keep flights safer.

Analyzed Economic Effects

4 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 3 costs, 0 mixed.

Estimated compliance cost to U.S. operators

The FAA estimates this proposed AD would affect 1,404 U.S.-registered airplanes and estimates a total cost on U.S. operators of up to $27,883,440. The FAA also estimates up to 76 work-hours per airplane at $85 per hour and parts costs up to $19,860 per airplane.

Seat rail bushes must be replaced

If you operate certain Airbus A318–A321 airplanes identified in EASA AD 2025-0207R1 (dated October 30, 2025), you must replace nylon bushes in seat rail connections with bronze bushes and you may not install the affected parts in those areas anymore. This requirement is incorporated into the FAA proposed AD and must be done in accordance with EASA AD 2025-0207R1 as adopted by the FAA.

Reduces risk of seat detachment injuries

This AD is intended to address broken bolts in seat rail connections that the FAA says could lead to seat detachment and passenger injuries under emergency landing loads. By requiring replacement of nylon bushes with bronze ones and inspections, the rule aims to reduce that safety risk for passengers on the affected airplanes.

Mandatory inspections and repair steps

Operators must perform rotating probe inspections for cracking, check hole diameters of brackets/seat tracks/long beams and inner diameters of bushings for tolerance, and contact the manufacturer for repair instructions where required; repairs must be done as specified and, in some cases, before further flight. These inspection and repair steps are required by incorporation of EASA AD 2025-0207R1 into the FAA AD.

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Key Dates

Published Date
Comments Due
3/10/2026
4/24/2026

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Transportation Department
Federal Aviation Administration
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