Brazil doesn't always get credit for aerospace excellence. But on May 8, 2026, Embraer — headquartered in Sao Jose dos Campos — posted the best first quarter in its history. Revenue: $1.4 billion. Growth: 31% year-on-year. Operating profit: up 52%. Backlog: $32.1 billion and rising.
While Boeing and Airbus spend their earnings calls explaining why they didn't deliver enough aircraft, Embraer is the one company whose numbers are moving emphatically in the right direction.
• Q1 2026 revenue: $1.4 billion — highest first quarter in company history
• Revenue growth: 31% year-on-year
• Aircraft delivered: 44 jets — up 47% YoY, highest in a decade
• Order backlog: $32.1 billion — sixth consecutive all-time record
• Defence revenue: $227 million (up 63%), driven by KC-390 and A-29 Super Tucano
• Executive jets: $418 million (up 30%)
Numbers That Make You Sit Up Straight
Of those 44 jets, 10 went to commercial airlines, 29 were executive jets, and five were defence-related. Every single segment posted double-digit growth. The defence number deserves special attention — a 63% surge reflects real contract execution. The KC-390 Millennium is selling. The A-29 Super Tucano is being delivered. Countries that were evaluating are now operating.
"Our record-breaking first quarter revenue is a testament to the strong demand across our segments. We continue to see tangible progress in production levelling and greater stability across our assembly lines."
The Defence Pivot Nobody Saw Coming
The KC-390 has become one of the most sought-after medium tactical airlifters. Portugal, Hungary, the Netherlands, Austria, the Czech Republic, and Sweden have all signed orders. The UAE's ten-aircraft deal pushes the C-390 firmly into Middle Eastern defence portfolios.
The Quiet Beneficiary of Boeing and Airbus Chaos
The E195-E2 seats up to 146 passengers and competes directly with the Airbus A220-300. Right now, Embraer is delivering on time while Airbus's A220 programme struggles with its ramp-up. Boeing's ongoing quality saga has left airlines seeking alternatives.
Embraer reaffirmed its 2026 guidance: revenue of $8.2-$8.5 billion. Quietly, methodically, the world's third-largest commercial aircraft manufacturer is executing. That's not a bad place to be when everyone else is apologising.
Sources: Aerotime Hub | Yahoo Finance | FlightGlobal | Leeham News
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Verwandte Fragen
What were Embraer's Q1 2026 results?
Embraer posted the best first quarter in its history in 2026: revenue of $1.4 billion, up 31% year-on-year, with operating profit up 52%. The Brazilian planemaker delivered 44 jets — up 47% and its highest in a decade — and reported a record order backlog of $32.1 billion.
What is Embraer?
Embraer is a Brazilian aerospace company headquartered in São José dos Campos, and one of the world's largest planemakers after Boeing and Airbus. It builds regional airliners, executive jets and defence aircraft such as the KC-390 transport and the A-29 Super Tucano light attack turboprop.
What aircraft does Embraer make?
Embraer produces commercial regional jets like the E-Jet family, a broad line of executive jets, and military aircraft including the KC-390 Millennium airlifter and A-29 Super Tucano. Of the 44 jets delivered in Q1 2026, 10 went to airlines, 29 were business jets and five were defence aircraft.
How big is Embraer's order backlog?
Embraer's backlog reached $32.1 billion in early 2026 — its sixth consecutive all-time record. A large, rising backlog signals years of secured future production and contrasts with the delivery struggles facing larger rivals, underpinning the company's strong revenue and profit growth.
Is Embraer involved in fighter jets?
Embraer's core defence products are the KC-390 airlifter and A-29 Super Tucano, and it co-produces the Gripen for Brazil. The country is also advancing toward building its first domestically assembled supersonic fighter, the Gripen E/F-39, with Embraer playing a central industrial role.
How does Embraer compare to other regional jet makers?
Embraer is the clear leader in regional jets, with a deep backlog and consistent deliveries. Competing clean-sheet programmes have faltered — most dramatically the Mitsubishi SpaceJet, cancelled after roughly $9 billion — leaving Embraer dominant in the 70-to-150-seat market.




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