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FAA nod propels Boeing's 777-9 into fourth certification stage

March 18, 2026 2:04 PM

March 18 (Reuters) - The ‌Federal Aviation ​Administration ​has permitted Boeing to continue advancing its long-delayed 777-9 jet into ‌the fourth phase of certification testing, the ⁠planemaker said on Wednesday.

FAA's greenlight comes a day ‌after Boeing CFO Jay ‌Malave said at an investor conference that the company had secured approval for the third ​stage.

"There are two more that we need to get approval for, and we're ⁠waiting for the next one very shortly here," Malave said.

FAA ​declined Reuters request for comment.

The 777-9 is the first model of Boeing's long-delayed ​new 777X jet, for ‌which the company has taken $15 billion in charges on the development ⁠program, which is six years behind schedule.

The 777X succeeds the 747 and 777 and, alongside the ⁠787 Dreamliner, makes up Boeing's widebody lineup for ​long-haul travel.

Last month, a company memo seen by Reuters showed Boeing's plans for the first flight of ‌a production 777X jet in April, which is slated for first delivery ‌next year.

The Air Current first reported the ⁠news related to ‌the FAA's nod ​earlier in the day.

(Reporting by Aatreyee Dasgupta in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh ‌Kuber)

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