JetBlue Airways (B6, New York JFK) operated the final revenue flight of its E190 fleet on September 9, 2025, marking the retirement of the type after 25 years of operations.

The carrier announced the retirement of the type in late 2024, moving to the younger A220-300. The final E190 flight connected New York JFK and Boston and was operated with N329JB (msn 19000433).

"The E190 was instrumental in our early years and proved to deliver on critical connectivity in short-haul markets, allowing us to grow into new regions, especially in our New York and Boston focus cities," said the carrier’s chief operating officer, Warren Christie.

ch-aviation data shows JetBlue’s fleet now comprises fifty-two A220-300s, 130 A320-200s, sixty-three A321-200s, twenty-eight A321-200NXs, and eleven A321-200NX(LR)s. The company still expects to receive forty-eight additional A220-300s.

“The A220 continues to unlock new possibilities for route expansion, including for transcontinental markets where the E190 was not equipped for the range needed,” JetBlue said in a statement.

The company has sold its remaining E190s to several parties, including Werner Aero, which acquired 12 of them earlier in the year.