In 2025, Air Canada will fly passenger Boeing 767s again (the airline already uses the type on cargo flights). The Star Alliance member leased an Omni Air International passenger 767 in June/July 2024, continuing what it did in 2019, 2020, and 2023.
However, Air Canada will return to using its own passenger 767s for the first time since 2020, when Rouge also ceased flying the aging but characterful widebody type. It helps that they are paid off, counterbalanced by higher fuel consumption and maintenance requirements.
Air Canada has two remaining passenger-configured 767-300ERs: 34.5-year-old C-FOCA and 33.7-year-old C-GLCA, both ex-Canadian Airlines. Stored at Hamilton, the aircraft have 211 seats: 24 lie-flat business seats…

![Members of boy band BTS pose for a photograph during their performance titled, ″BTS The Comeback Live: Arirang,″ in central Seoul on March 21. [NETFLIX/BIGHIT MUSIC]](https://images.traveltrade.today/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Foreign-Tourist-Arrivals-Hit-Pre-Pandemic-Levels-in-March-BTS-Recovery.jpg)













