Goodbye, Singapore Airlines Boeing 737-800s

Goodbye, Singapore Airlines Boeing 737-800s


At 6.19 a.m this morning, 9V-MGN, operating as SQ441 from Kathmandu, landed at Singapore Changi Airport. It taxied to the terminal, offloaded its passengers and baggage, and will soon be towed into the annals of history.

SQ441 marks Singapore Airlines’ final scheduled flight of a Boeing 737-800, and caps a strange little period where it was practically forced to operate an aircraft it never really wanted.

Singapore Airlines’ B737-800s offered a retro cabin experience, to say the least

With creaky recliner seats in Business Class, no inflight entertainment screens, and no Wi-Fi, the Boeing 737-800 offered a largely analogue experience. I’ll always love how SIA’s website tried to spin it: “As the 737-800NG does not feature internet connectivity, indulge in a leisurely reading break.”

SIA knew that these aircraft fell well short of what its passengers had come to expect, and shunted them to its shortest or lowest-yield routes, the aviation equivalent of throwing a towel over the stained couch before guests come over and hoping no one peeks underneath.

While it’s not beyond the realm of possibility that 9V-MGN might be reactivated to cover an unexpected maintenance issue, as we transition into the IATA Northern Winter Season, Singapore Airlines can finally claim “a flat bed for every Business Class seat, and Wi-Fi on every plane”.

Goodbye, Boeing 737-800s!

Singapore Airlines has progressively retired its inherited B737-800 fleet | Photo: Plane’s Portrait Aviation Media

Singapore Airlines had previously confirmed its plans to retire its four remaining B737-800s by 31 March 2026, the end of the current financial year. 

However, the final lease on the B737-800 actually terminates in January 2026, and the aircraft needs to stop flying ahead of that date, to prepare it for return.

The B737-800s will be replaced by new arrivals of the B737-8 MAX, of which the airline currently has 19 (plus a further 10 on order). These offer a much superior passenger experience, with full-flat beds in Business Class, and personal inflight entertainment screens and Wi-Fi throughout the cabin (ironically though, the B737-800 offers power outlets in Economy Class, whereas the B737-8 MAX only has USB charging ports).

  Singapore Airlines B737-8 Business Class
Seats 12 10
Layout 2-2
2-2
2-2
2-2
1-1
2-2
Seat Width 21″ 19-22″
Seat Pitch 39″ 44″
Bed Length N/A 76″
Recline 8″ Full flat 
IFE Screen N/A 16″
Power Outlets 1x power outlet
1x USB port
1x power outlet
2x USB ports
Wi-Fi N/A Free
Nostalgia Factor Off the charts N/A

Singapore Airlines has already retired five B737-800s over the past three years as their leases expired, which are now operated by REX Airlines and Virgin Australia. The four remaining aircraft that SIA started FY25/26 with — 9V-MGK, 9V-MGL, 9V-MGM, and 9V-MGN — were first delivered to SilkAir in 2015 and are more than a decade old.

9V-MGK 31 Mar 2015 With Qantas as VH-XZQ
9V-MGL 15 Aug 2015 With Qantas as VH-XZR
9V-MGM 22 Sep 2015 With Qantas as VH-XZS
9V-MGN 3 Oct 2015 TBD (due for Qantas)

All these aircraft have been acquired or will be acquired by Qantas, which is leasing them to provide “bridging capacity” due to delays in the arrival of its new fleet of Airbus A321XLRs. Qantas intends to refit them with new interiors, though it’s nothing cutting-edge from what I can see.

What does this mean for Singapore Airlines?

With the retirement of the B737-800s, Singapore Airlines can now make several promises.

Flat bed seats throughout Business Class

Singapore Airlines B737-8 Business Class
SIA Business Class passengers can now expect a flat bed seat on every flight (though not direct aisle access)

Singapore Airlines had previously planned to offer flat bed Business Class seats across its fleet by early 2020, as it inherited SilkAir’s Boeing 737-8 MAX aircraft and outfitted them with Thomson Aero Vantage lie-flat seats. However, the global Boeing 737-8 MAX grounding threw a spanner into the works, and instead of transferring SilkAir’s Boeing 737-800s to Scoot, it had to take them for itself.

With the retirement, SIA Business Class passengers are now guaranteed a flat bed seat, even on the shortest of flights to Kuala Lumpur. 

That said, SIA will not be able to claim direct aisle access for all Business Class passengers, because of the 2-2, 1-1-, 2-2 layout on its B737-8 MAX that only offers it to 60% of the cabin.





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