In July 2025, Virgin Atlantic announced plans to invest in its passenger experience, including all-new cabins on its fleet of Boeing 787-9s. This is overdue, since the Dreamliners have the worst interiors you’ll find on Virgin Atlantic’s “next generation” fleet, with herringbone seats in business class.
At the time, Virgin Atlantic also mentioned in passing a planned new premium configuration for its Airbus A330-900neos, and we now have more of a sense of what exactly to expect, and the timeline (thanks to Neil for flagging this)
In this post:
Virgin Atlantic plans 10 Airbus A330-900neos with 232 seats
Virgin Atlantic has a total of 19 Airbus A330-900neos on order. Eight of those have already been delivered, and one should be delivered shortly, meaning the airline will then have 10 A330neos remaining on order, to be delivered as of this fall.
For those A330neos, the airline is planning an all-new layout:
- Current A330-900neos have 262 seats, including 32 business class seats, 46 premium economy seats, and 184 economy seats
- Upcoming A330-900neos will have 232 seats, including 48 business class seats, 56 premium economy seats, and 128 economy seats
As you can see, total capacity on these planes will decrease by 30 seats, but they’ll pick up 16 business class seats and 10 more premium economy seats, so that seems like a fair tradeoff. Currently, business class consists of just eight rows entirely between the first and second set of doors, while with the new layout, there will be an extra business class cabin behind the second set of doors, with another four rows.
The product as such is expected to be the same, as the airline will continue to have Vantage XL suites in business class, which are staggered seats with doors.

One interesting product development we’ll see is that the number of Retreat Suites will increase from two to six. Currently, the two center seats in the first row are known as Retreat Suites, and that’s the carrier’s “business class plus” product.
In the new layout, there will be a full four additional Retreat Suites, located at the bulkhead in the second cabin. So this means that for the first time, we’ll see solo Retreat Suites at the window, which some people will appreciate.

I’m curious to see if the social space is maintained on these A330neos, or if Virgin Atlantic finally eliminates it. There’s no icon on the seat map indicating there’s a social space, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Virgin Atlantic has finally decided it can use that space more efficiently, after chipping away at the concept for years.

Virgin Atlantic’s new Airbus A330-900neo layout will debut soon
Virgin Atlantic is expected to take delivery of its first Airbus A330-900neo with new cabins in the coming months. As it currently stands, the first flight I see scheduled for the new interiors is as of November 5, 2026, between London (LHR) and New York (JFK), on VS45/46.
You can expect the plane to then gradually serve more routes as time goes on, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see multiple daily New York flights.
Ultimately Virgin Atlantic opting for a more premium A330 layout makes a lot of sense. Virgin Atlantic is 49% owned by Delta, and the carrier’s network is largely centered around the United States, where transatlantic demand is highly seasonal. In summer, it’s not hard to fill every seat, while in winter, it’s common to see flights to & from London fairly empty in economy, while they’re still quite full in premium cabins.
Outside of summer, making the economics of transatlantic service work is all about how many premium seats you can fill. So for the slower times of the year (in terms of demand across the Atlantic), this layout will allow the airline to maximize revenue.
So I’d expect these premium A330-900neos to largely operate routes that would otherwise be flown by the A350-1000. However, there’s also some amount of route “musical chairs” here, since Virgin Atlantic is retiring A330-300s as it takes delivery of these new planes, which are typically used for the least premium or high yield routes.

Bottom line
Virgin Atlantic will soon start flying a subfleet of Airbus A330-900neos in a more premium layout. These planes will feature 30 fewer total seats than existing A330neos, but they’ll boast 16 more business class seats and 10 more premium economy seats.
While existing fleets won’t be reconfigured, 10 upcoming deliveries will feature these new interiors, and they’re expected to make a debut to New York (JFK) as of November 2026. These planes will also feature six Retreat Suites, a tripling of the current footprint of this product.
What do you make of Virgin Atlantic’s premium A330neo plans?
It’s great to see a single retreat suite but I am a little bit disappointed they are not located in the forward cabin, I remember the mini cabin on the A343 was always second choice for many, let’s hope the crew police the divide more effectively.
In any these upcoming reviews please mention up front if new biz configurations have avoided placing seats with passengers backs to the windows. That’s a new unfortunate trend that I don’t want to dig for in the details.