United Airlines just turned a Boeing 787-10 into a flying flag. On 15 June 2026, the carrier rolled out a bold “Stars and Stripes” special livery — a deep blue fuselage, fifty white stars, and diagonal red-and-white stripes sweeping across the tail — to mark the 250th anniversary of the United States.
It is not subtle, and that is the point. Two jets wear the scheme: the widebody 787-10 and a single-aisle 737-800, both painted in Amarillo, Texas. Each carries a small commemorative plaque dedicated to the airline’s active-duty service members and veterans.
QUICK FACTS
What: United’s “Stars and Stripes” special livery for America’s 250th anniversary
Aircraft: Boeing 787-10 (N91007) and Boeing 737-800 (N78285)
Unveiled: 15 June 2026, at Washington Dulles International Airport
Design: 50 white stars and diagonal red-and-white stripes on a deep blue fuselage
Painted: Amarillo, Texas
Tied to: A milestone in United’s military-pilot hiring program
A patriotic paint race
United is not alone in dressing up for America’s semiquincentennial. American Airlines announced its own America250 jets back in March, and Southwest unveiled an aircraft it calls “Independence One” in April. For the US majors, a special livery is cheap, highly visible marketing that puts the brand on every ramp and every aviation-photographer’s feed for a year.
United used the unveiling at Washington Dulles — with US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and CEO Scott Kirby on hand — to wrap the celebration around its own story.
The story behind the plaque
The veterans plaque is not just decoration. United tied the livery launch to a milestone in its Military Pilot Program, which gives active-duty US military aviators a conditional job offer with the airline far earlier than they could previously receive one.
United says nearly 600 military pilots have moved to the airline through the program since 2024, with another 500 expected by the end of 2027. The carrier now employs more than 18,000 pilots, over 4,500 of them veterans — a reminder of how deep the pipeline runs between military and commercial flying.
For a fighter-jet audience, that pipeline is a familiar story: many of the people flying you across the Atlantic in a 787 once flew F-16s, F/A-18s or C-17s. The Stars and Stripes jet is United’s way of putting that heritage on the outside of the aeroplane.
Catch it while it flies
Special liveries never last forever — jets eventually return to standard colours at their next heavy maintenance. For now, though, two of United’s aircraft will spend the summer crossing the country looking like a flag with wings. Spotters will be chasing the 787-10 in particular all year.
Sources: United Airlines newsroom; AeroTime; Business Traveller; PR Newswire.




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