IndiGo vs Air India 2026: Which Indian Airline Wins in 2026?
IndiGo holds 63 percent domestic share and just launched Stretch business class. Air India runs Tata's $70B Vihaan.AI fleet renewal. Bags, routes compared.
On this page
- Quick verdict
- Side-by-side specs
- What I weighed for this comparison
- The IndiGo Stretch launch changed the co...
- Carry-on and checked baggage: IndiGo enf...
- Where they actually overlap, and where t...
- Vihaan.AI: where Air India is in 2026
- Is IndiGo or Air India better for freque...
- Who should pick IndiGo
- Who should pick Air India
- The Bottom Line
- FAQ
- Go deeper
- Related
Quick verdict
IndiGo wins on domestic India coverage (63 percent market share, 1,800-plus daily flights, dominant narrow-body operation) and on the new Stretch business class launched January 29, 2026 (12 seats per aircraft, 38-inch pitch on A321neo, 44-inch on A321XLR, now flying to Singapore). Air India wins on international long-haul (US, UK, Europe), checked-bag allowance on its main fare classes (8 kg cabin and 23 kg checked vs IndiGo's stricter 7 kg total cabin), Star Alliance miles, and the rolling Vihaan.AI fleet renewal that brought the first factory-new Boeing 787-9 in late 2025 and adds an A350-1000 in 2026.
| Spec | IndiGo | Air India |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 21.7 x 13.8 x 9.8" | 22 x 16 x 8" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 55 x 35 x 25 cm | 55 x 40 x 20 cm |
| Carry-on weight | 7 kg (15.4 lb) | 7 kg (15.4 lb) |
| Carry-on fee | Free | Free |
| Personal item | 13.8 x 9.8 x 5.9" | 16 x 12 x 6" |
| 1st checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| 2nd checked bag | Not published | $0 |
| Basic economy | Not restricted | Value |
| Gate-check risk | Medium | Medium |
Two airlines fly nine out of every ten Indian domestic seats. IndiGo runs a narrow-body operation of more than 1,800 daily flights at 63.6 percent market share, with the A320neo, A321neo, and A321XLR fleet dominating routes from Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Chennai outward. Air India, three years into Tata Group’s Vihaan.AI transformation and now at 26.5 percent of the domestic market, is investing the difference into widebody fleet renewal: the largest aircraft order in commercial aviation history (470 planes for 70 billion dollars), a 400 million dollar retrofit of 26 legacy 787-8s, and a January 2026 launch of new cabin product across its rebuilt fleet. The third-place airlines collectively serve the remaining 9 percent of seats. This comparison is the comparison most Indian travelers make.
Short version: IndiGo wins on domestic India, full stop, and now offers a credible regional business class (Stretch, launched January 29, 2026) on its A321 fleet to Singapore. Air India wins on international long-haul (US, UK, Europe, Tokyo, Sydney nonstops), on cabin comfort once the Vihaan.AI retrofit reaches your specific aircraft, and on Star Alliance miles. For a one-off domestic India trip, IndiGo. For a US or Europe-to-India routing, Air India. For a Singapore or Southeast Asia routing where the new Stretch product flies, IndiGo’s value pricing now competes with Air India’s full-service Economy.
What I weighed for this comparison
The two carriers are converging from opposite ends. IndiGo started as a low-cost domestic carrier and just launched a business class. Air India started as a flag carrier and is rebuilding to compete on cost and consistency. The criteria need to reflect the trajectory, not the historical labels:
- Domestic India market dominance and frequency, where IndiGo is structurally ahead
- International long-haul routes from India, where Air India is the only Indian flag option
- The IndiGo Stretch product, launched January 29, 2026 with concrete pitch numbers
- Vihaan.AI fleet renewal progress, including the first factory-new 787-9 in December 2025
- Carry-on and checked baggage, where IndiGo’s strict 7 kg total cabin is the standout limit
- Star Alliance access, available on Air India but not IndiGo
- On-time performance and operational predictability, where IndiGo has historically led
The IndiGo Stretch launch changed the comparison in January 2026
For most of the IndiGo-vs-Air-India era, the comparison was simple. IndiGo flew cheap domestic and short-haul international with no business class. Air India flew everything, with widebody and a flat-bed business class on long-haul. The two airlines did not really compete on cabin product.
That changed on January 29, 2026 when IndiGo launched “6E Ways to Fly,” a restructured fare lineup across 5 tiers and 2 cabins, with the new Stretch business class as the second cabin. Stretch is 12 seats in a 2-2 configuration. On the A321neo (used domestically and for shorter international routes), Stretch offers 38 inches of pitch. On the A321XLR (the long-haul narrow-body used for routes like Mumbai to Manchester), Stretch offers 44 inches of pitch. Stretch is now flying on all major metro-to-Singapore routes and the plan is to expand to 45 aircraft across 12 routes and 260 daily flights within 14 months of the January 2026 launch.
Stretch is not a flat-bed. It is a generous regional business class, comparable to a domestic First Class in the US (like American’s A321T transcon F or Delta’s First). It is the right product for a 4 to 7 hour flight and is competitive on Indian metro-to-Singapore, Indian metro-to-Bangkok, and Indian metro-to-Doha routes. It is not the right product for a 14-hour India-to-Sydney or India-to-Frankfurt.
Air India Business on the 787-9, 777, and (newly arriving) A350-1000 is a true flat-bed product. The retrofitted 787-8 aircraft (first one arrived Delhi April 13, 2026) carry the new Air India business class with privacy doors. The unretrofitted legacy aircraft (about half the widebody fleet through mid-2027) still fly the older cabin without the privacy door upgrade.
- Winner: regional business class (4-7 hours)
- IndiGo Stretch / 38-44 inch pitch on A321 fleet; competitive on Singapore, Bangkok, Doha
- Winner: long-haul flat-bed business class
- Air India / true lie-flat on 787-9, 777, A350-1000
- Winner: cabin retrofit completeness
- IndiGo / Stretch is consistent across all delivered aircraft; Air India's retrofit completes mid-2027
Carry-on and checked baggage: IndiGo enforces, Air India accommodates
The two airlines run materially different baggage philosophies.
IndiGo caps total cabin weight at 7 kg across the carry-on (55 by 35 by 25 cm) and personal item (35 by 25 by 15 cm). The personal item must weigh under 3 kg by itself. Enforcement is hard at the security checkpoint via cabin bag tags, and again at the gate. The published gate fee for over-weight cabin baggage is 600 INR per extra kg, charged on the spot. Domestic checked is 15 kg on Saver and 25 kg on higher fares; international piece concept varies by sector.
Air India Economy allows a single carry-on bag (55 by 40 by 20 cm) at 7 kg on domestic routes and 8 kg on international routes, plus a 40 by 30 by 15 cm personal item, with both items weighed separately. Air India does not enforce a strict total across the two pieces. Checked baggage on US-India Value fare is 1 piece at 23 kg; Classic and Flex fares add a second 23 kg piece. Business class adds 2 pieces at 32 kg each.
The practical effect: on a domestic India flight the two airlines are functionally tied on cabin weight (7 kg either way), but Air India still allows the personal item to be weighed separately while IndiGo counts it in the total. On an international Air India flight the 8 kg per-piece allowance is a real advantage. A traveler who packs a 7 kg roller plus a 5 kg laptop backpack walks onto an international Air India flight without question and gets flagged on IndiGo. The trip that matters here is the work-laptop-plus-clothes packing pattern, which is harder to do on IndiGo’s 7 kg total.
- Winner: international cabin weight limit
- Air India / 8 kg per piece on international vs IndiGo's 7 kg total
- Winner: domestic cabin weight limit
- Tie / 7 kg either way, but Air India weighs the personal item separately
- Winner: carry-on width and depth
- Air India / 55 by 40 vs IndiGo's 55 by 35
- Winner: checked allowance on US-India routes
- Air India / 1-2 pieces at 23 kg vs IndiGo not flying US routes
Where they actually overlap, and where they do not
IndiGo and Air India both fly: most major Indian domestic city pairs, India to Singapore (now with Stretch on IndiGo), India to Doha, India to Bangkok, and India to Dubai. On these overlapping routes the choice is a real comparison.
IndiGo flies and Air India does not: more frequencies on domestic India (typically 6 to 10 daily flights on a major metro pair vs Air India’s 2 to 4), denser tier-2 and tier-3 city coverage, and the new IndiGoStretch A321XLR routes into Manchester and select short-of-long-haul European points.
Air India flies and IndiGo does not (or barely): US nonstops (JFK, Newark, San Francisco, Chicago), UK nonstops (Heathrow, multiple times daily from Delhi and Mumbai), continental Europe (Frankfurt, Paris, Vienna, Amsterdam, Milan), Japan (Tokyo), Australia (Sydney, Melbourne), and select African destinations. Air India is the only Indian flag carrier on most of these routings.
The Singapore route is the cleanest head-to-head. Both airlines fly Delhi-Singapore, Mumbai-Singapore, Bengaluru-Singapore, and Chennai-Singapore daily. IndiGo’s Stretch business class on the A321XLR or A321neo is the new product; Air India’s Business on the A320neo or 777 is the established option. For Economy, IndiGo’s fare is usually 20 to 35 percent lower than Air India’s at sticker, and the journey time is comparable.
- Winner: domestic India network depth
- IndiGo / 63 percent market share, 1,800-plus daily flights
- Winner: India to US nonstop
- Air India / IndiGo does not fly North America
- Winner: India to UK and continental Europe
- Air India / denser long-haul network
- Winner: India to Singapore (head-to-head)
- Subjective / IndiGo wins on price and Stretch product; Air India wins on flat-bed business
Vihaan.AI: where Air India is in 2026
The Vihaan.AI transformation is the second variable that changes the comparison in 2026.
Air India placed the largest aircraft order in commercial aviation history in December 2022: 470 aircraft for approximately 70 billion dollars, comprising 210 A320neo, 40 A350, 190 737 MAX, 20 787-9, and 10 777-9 aircraft. The order has been working through delivery since late 2023.
The first factory-new Boeing 787-9 was inducted in December 2025. Air India expects six widebody inductions during 2026, including its first A350-1000 deliveries. The 30 grounded aircraft from the pre-Tata era have been restored to service. A separate 400 million dollar retrofit program is overhauling 26 legacy Boeing 787-8 aircraft nose-to-tail; the first retrofitted aircraft arrived in Delhi on April 13, 2026 and the full fleet retrofit completes by mid-2027.
The implication for 2026 bookings: which Air India aircraft you actually fly is unpredictable on long-haul. A retrofitted 787-8 (rare today, more common late 2026) is a credible modern cabin. A pre-retrofit 787-8 or older 777 is the legacy Air India product. Air India does not currently publish aircraft-retrofit status by flight number, so the booking is a partial gamble.
IndiGo, by contrast, runs a single-class narrow-body fleet (with Stretch added as a second cabin) that is consistent across aircraft of the same type. Cabin product on IndiGo is more predictable.
- Winner: cabin product consistency by aircraft
- IndiGo / single-fleet, Stretch added uniformly
- Winner: trajectory of cabin improvement
- Air India / Vihaan.AI retrofits + 470-aircraft new-order pipeline
- Winner: predictability of what you actually fly
- IndiGo / narrow-body fleet is uniform; Air India widebody is mid-transition
Is IndiGo or Air India better for frequent flyer status?
IndiGo runs the BluChip loyalty program, a relatively minor frequent flyer scheme without alliance integration. Earning is per-rupee-spent and redemption is on IndiGo flights. No status reciprocity with US, European, or other Asian carriers. For a frequent India domestic traveler who only flies IndiGo, BluChip is fine. For anyone who collects miles across multiple airlines, BluChip is effectively a single-airline punch card.
Air India is a Star Alliance member, which means miles earned on Air India credit through the Flying Returns program to status across 26 partner airlines (United, Lufthansa, Singapore, ANA, EVA Air, Thai, Turkish, and others). The same Air India Delhi-to-Newark flight earns redeemable miles, qualifies for Star Alliance Gold status with sufficient flying, and unlocks lounge and priority benefits on partner airlines globally.
For a traveler doing only domestic India or India-to-Southeast-Asia trips on IndiGo’s network, the loyalty difference does not matter. For anyone whose travel includes US, European, or other long-haul trips, Air India’s Star Alliance access is genuinely worth a fare premium over IndiGo on the comparable route.
- Winner: alliance integration
- Air India / Star Alliance with 26 partners
- Winner: earning rate on home-airline metal
- Tie / both reasonable for own-airline redemptions
- Winner: value for a frequent multi-airline flyer
- Air India / Star Alliance status compounds across the year
- Winner: value for an IndiGo-only domestic flyer
- Tie / BluChip is fine if you do not need cross-airline benefits
Who should pick IndiGo
- You are flying domestic India and want the most frequencies, the densest network, and the most predictable on-time performance
- You are flying India to Singapore, Bangkok, Doha, or Dubai and want a value fare with the option of Stretch business class
- You travel light enough to fit the 7 kg total cabin allowance and pay extra for checked when needed
- You value a single-fleet operation where cabin product is consistent across the entire airline
- You are based in a tier-2 or tier-3 Indian city where IndiGo’s coverage is materially deeper than Air India’s
- You do not need an international alliance for status or redemption
- You are booking a domestic metro pair and the lower fare matters more than the full-service trimming
Who should pick Air India
- You are flying from the US, UK, Europe, Australia, or Japan to India and want the only Indian-flag nonstop option
- You want a real flat-bed business class on long-haul routes
- You travel with a heavier laptop kit or work bag where Air India’s 8 kg international per-piece allowance (vs IndiGo’s 7 kg total) matters
- You collect Star Alliance miles and value the cross-airline benefit
- You are willing to bet on the Vihaan.AI retrofit timing and you book selectively for newer aircraft (factory-new 787-9 or retrofitted 787-8)
- You want a checked-bag allowance that supports a longer trip without bag-fee surprises
- You value premium economy as an option on US-India routes (Air India has it; IndiGo does not)
The Bottom Line
The IndiGo and Air India comparison in 2026 is not the comparison it was in 2022. IndiGo launched a business class on January 29, 2026. Air India is mid-Vihaan.AI rebuild with the first new widebody (factory-fresh 787-9) inducted in December 2025 and the first A350-1000 delivery expected this year. Both airlines are moving toward the middle from opposite ends.
For domestic India, IndiGo is the default. The 63 percent market share is structural and reflects the real coverage advantage. Air India is the better domestic pick only when you specifically want a full-service experience on a flagship route, when you need Star Alliance Gold lounge access at a major Indian airport, or when the Air India Business fare is genuinely competitive on the route you are flying.
For India-to-Southeast-Asia, especially Singapore, the choice is closer than it was. IndiGo’s Stretch business class on the A321XLR is a legitimate regional product and the Economy fare typically beats Air India by 20 to 35 percent at sticker. Either airline works; the IndiGo Stretch is the new option worth a look.
For India-to-US, India-to-UK, and India-to-Continental-Europe, Air India is the only Indian-flag nonstop option. IndiGo does not fly these routes. The comparison is essentially Air India vs Emirates, Air India vs Lufthansa, or Air India vs British Airways, not Air India vs IndiGo.
For carry-on and checked baggage, Air India is more generous on international (8 kg per piece on international Economy, weighed separately from the personal item) and matched on domestic (7 kg cabin, but still with the personal item weighed separately). IndiGo’s 7 kg total cabin allowance across both pieces is the strictest rule in this comparison cohort, and the enforcement at security is unusually rigorous. Pack accordingly.
Pick by route and by trip purpose. The 91 percent of the Indian domestic market that these two airlines hold reflects a real duopoly with real differences, and the 2026 versions of both carriers are different from what they were even a year ago.
For more Indian-corridor context, see Air India vs Emirates for the India-to-Gulf premium choice, or Singapore Airlines vs Cathay Pacific for the Asia-pair tier above Indian operations. For the full per-airline baggage policies, see IndiGo carry-on size and Air India carry-on size.
Frequently asked questions
Is IndiGo or Air India better for domestic flights in India?
Does Air India or IndiGo have better international flights?
Is IndiGo Stretch business class worth booking?
Where is Air India in its Vihaan.AI fleet renewal in 2026?
Which airline has better carry-on and checked baggage policies?
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Last verified 2026-05-21 against official IndiGo and Air India policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.