Two Boeing planes intended for use by a Chinese airline landed back in the aerospace manufacturer’s U.S. production home on April 19, as tensions build between the United States and China over an ongoing tariff war.
Meant to be used by China’s Xiamen Airlines, the first 737 Max jet landed at Seattle’s Boeing Field just after 6 p.m. local time, photos showed. The plane, painted with Xiamen’s branding, made refueling stops in Guam and Hawaii on its roughly 5,000-mile journey back to the United States.
A second jet intended for use by Xiamen Airlines followed, flying from Boeing’s Zhoushan completion center to Guam on Monday, according to flight tracking website AirNav Radar.
President Donald Trump raised baseline tariffs on Chinese imports to 145 percent, triggering a retaliatory 125 percent tariff from China on U.S. goods.
Because of the new tariffs, a Chinese airline taking delivery of the roughly $55 million Boeing jet could be significantly impacted by the import duties, according to IBA, an aviation consultancy group.
It’s not clear who made the final decision to return the 737 Max to the United States, as neither Boeing nor Xiamen provided an explanation.
The 737 Max, which remains Boeing’s bestselling model, has been embroiled in multiple safety incidents since the two fatal 2018 and 2019 crashes that killed all occupants on board.
In 2024, a 737 Max door panel ripped off an Alaska Airlines flight just after takeoff, prompting the Federal Aviation Administration to increase its oversight of Boeing.
The April 19 return of the 737 Max intended for Xiamen is a sign of disruption in new aircraft deliveries after the industry enjoyed decades of duty-free status in trade.
The ongoing tariff war also comes as Boeing has faced a nearly five-year import freeze on 737 Max jets.
Industry analysts say the confusion over the rapidly shifting tariffs could leave many aircraft deliveries in limbo, as some airline CEOs have suggested that they would rather defer delivery of jets than pay the duties.
Amid recent reports that China might be ordering its airlines to cease taking further deliveries of Boeing jets, the U.S. plane manufacturer’s shares dropped by 2.5 percent on April 15. Before that, shares had fallen by 10 percent so far this year.
The tariff war between the United States and China has ensnared Boeing, with ongoing negotiations leaving little certainty as to where the ceiling may be on tariffs imposed by either nation on the other.
The president suggested that he may have a deal with China to end the tariff war “over the next three or four weeks.”