Boeing reported a 14% increase in revenue to approximately $22.2 billion in the first quarter of 2026, driven by a 10% rise in commercial airplane deliveries to 143 units, the highest quarterly total since 2019.
Commercial aviation deliveries included 114 Boeing 737 aircraft, along with six 767s, eight 777s, and 15 787 Dreamliners. The 737 program accounted for nearly 80% of commercial deliveries, reflecting its central role in production ramp-up. The defense, space, and security division delivered 130 units, including 15 remanufactured and two new AH-64 Apache helicopters, one new and one refurbished CH-47 Chinook, one F-15, two F/A-18 fighters, four KC-46 tankers, two MH-139 helicopters, one P-8 aircraft, and one commercial satellite.
Cash burn totaled $1.45 billion, below analyst estimates of $2.61 billion. Defense revenues grew 21% to $7.6 billion, with operating margins improving to 3.1%. Boeing posted an adjusted loss of 20 cents per share, better than the expected 76 cents. The company maintains its 2026 free cash flow guidance of $1 billion to $3 billion.
These delivery figures are preliminary and subject to confirmation with official financial results.