‍DALLAS — A U.S. political flare-up over aircraft certification put an 
unexpected spotlight on how deeply Canadian-built jets and helicopters are 
embedded in the U.S. fleet, especially Bombardier business aircraft and 
regional jets that fly thousands of daily segments.

U.S. President Donald Trump used a Truth Social post today to call on the FAA 
to “decertify” Bombardier private jets, framing the threat as retaliation for 
Canada’s refusal to certify certain Gulfstream models, according to reporting.

The move raised questions about what “decertify” could mean in practice, since 
aircraft type certification sits with regulators, not politicians, and 
typically ties to engineering and safety findings rather than trade disputes. A 
day later, the White House states that any action "would not apply to planes in 
operation."

For a sense of scale, Cirium data shared with Airways show 5,425 Canadian-made 
aircraft (including narrow-bodies, regional jets, trainers, and helicopters) in 
service and registered in the U.S. Of that total, 2,678 are Bombardier aircraft 
built in Canada operated by 1,202 operators. Cirium’s dataset also flags 150 
Bombardier Global Express aircraft in the U.S. registry, spread across 115 
operators, underscoring how widely those long-range business jets are 
distributed across corporate and private fleets.

The same Cirium snapshot highlights Canada’s role in U.S. commercial operations 
beyond business aviation. Canadian-built regional jets remain a core tool for 
U.S. network connectivity, and outside reporting notes that hundreds of 
Bombardier CRJ aircraft fly U.S. schedules each day, making any broad 
certification threat operationally explosive even before it reaches legal 
reality.

Cirium also counts 58 Airbus A220-family aircraft in U.S. service, operated by 
Delta Air Lines (46), JetBlue (10), and Breeze (2)—a reminder that 
“Canadian-made” spans multiple OEMs and programs, not just Bombardier. (Airbus 
builds A220s in both Canada and the U.S.; Cirium’s figures refer to 
Canadian-made frames in the U.S. registry.)

Why It Matters

Even if the rhetoric never translates into formal action, it shows how quickly 
geopolitics can collide with fleet realities—and why operators, lessors, and 
manufacturers treat certification pathways as one of aviation’s most sensitive 
chokepoints.

For background, Gulfstream pursued multi-regulator approvals for its newest 
large-cabin types, with certification milestones that typically involve the FAA 
and other authorities.

Note: Bombardier sold the Dash 8 program and the De Havilland brand to Longview 
in 2019. De Havilland Aircraft of Canada now runs the program.

Canadian-made aircraft in the U.S. registry
In-service aircraft registered in the United States • Source: Cirium • 
Snapshot: Jan 2026
5,425

Total Canadian-made aircraft in U.S. registry (all types)

2,678

Bombardier-built (Canada) in U.S. registry • 1,202 operators

150

Global Express in U.S. registry • 115 operators

58

Airbus A220 (Canada-built) in U.S. registry

Bombardier vs non-Bombardier share

Top U.S. operators of Canadian-made aircraft

Largest Canadian-made families (U.S. registry)

A220 operators (Canada-built frames)

Operator list (top 15)

| Operator | Total in service |
| SkyWest Airlines | 238 |
| NetJets | 200 |
| Endeavor Air | 141 |
| PSA Airlines | 138 |
| Air Evac Lifeteam | 125 |
| Flexjet | 106 |
| Air Methods LLC | 98 |
| Solairus Aviation | 94 |
| Executive Jet Management | 79 |
| Med-Trans Corp | 59 |
| Helicopters Inc (Illinois) | 54 |
| GoJet Airlines | 53 |
| Corporate American Operator | 49 |
| Delta Air Lines | 47 |
| Mesa Airlines | 45 |

Tip: swipe the table left/right on mobile (it won’t push the page).Data from 
Cirium, an aviation analytics company. Canadian-made aircraft include jets and 
helicopters across multiple OEMs.

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Airways Calendar 2026

The Airways Photography team has selected their finest aviation images for the 
Airways 2026 calendar. Twelve mon...
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