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Review: Air India’s new A350 business class from London to Delhi – a world-class experience

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This is our review of Air India’s new A350-900 from London to Delhi in business class.

An airline in the middle of a five-year transformation is not one you expect to deliver a world-class experience. And yet, that’s exactly what Air India did on my flights to and from Delhi.

Granted, this was on board the airline’s new flagship A350-900, now operating one of the two daily London-Delhi services – most routes are stuck with Air India’s older (and as yet unrefurbished) aircraft.

Nevertheless, it’s clear that the new Air India has invested heavily in food, service and ‘soft product’ (blankets, pillows, amenity kits etc) to rival even the best airlines. Singapore Airline’s 25% stake is making itself felt.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

As a quick reminder if you haven’t read my conversation with Air India CEO Campbell Wilson where we discuss the airline’s turnaround: we were invited as part of a group of journalists to see the airline’s progress since privatisation in 2022.

Air India currently has 570 aircraft on order including many long haul variants, but it is also about to start a full refurbishment program of its entire existing fleet including the Boeing 787s and 777s.

Those aircraft will feature Air India’s own bespoke cabins. The current six A350s, on the other hand, feature a different seat originally designed for Aeroflot. Air India was able to pick these planes up quickly and speed up its fleet transformation after Airbus was prevented from delivering them to Aeroflot following the invasion of Ukraine and the introduction of sanctions.

Air India check-in and ground experience

Air India operates from Terminal 2 at Heathrow airport where it is co-located with most of its Star Alliance partners. As the most modern of Heathrow’s four terminals it is a comfortable experience and well connected to public transport – Terminals 2 and 3 get the most Piccadilly Line, Elizabeth Line and Heathrow Express trains of any terminal at the airport.

Check-in is from Zone D, behind the first row of check-in desks. There are two dedicated business class counters available:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

The location is convenient, literally next door to the priority security channel to which you have access as a business class passenger (Star Alliance Gold members can also use it when travelling in economy). That said, until Heathrow upgrades the scanners to the new CT models the ‘priority’ lane at Terminal 2 isn’t always that efficient.

Air India does not operate its own lounge at Heathrow (although it wants to), instead directing passengers to any one of the Star Alliance lounges available. My recommendation would be the newly refurbished Singapore Airlines SilverKris Lounge; this has a good bar and buffet as well as being in the T2B satellite terminal where most long haul flights depart from. It was pleasantly quiet during my morning visit as the first Singapore Airlines flight does not depart until after the first Air India one.

Business class onboard Air India’s A350-900

I was pleased to see Air India use two jetbridges in London and Delhi, which makes boarding quicker and more pleasant for all involved.  

As I mentioned above, Air India’s current fleet of A350s have not been designed to their own spec but rather Aeroflot’s. Although they were never delivered to Aeroflot they have been lightly refurbished to match Air India’s brand.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

These aircraft feature 28 seats in business class, 24 in premium economy and 264 in economy. Compared to some airlines this is a relatively small business class cabin and all 28 seats fit between the front and second doors.

Seats are the Collins Horizon model. Collins is most famous for its herringbone Super Diamond / Elements seat used by many airlines including British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Etihad and others.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

The Horizon seat is its less popular (but arguably more comfortable!) sibling. This is a staggered seat rather than angled, so all seats face forward with seats alternating between being closer to the aisle or the window.

This was my first time experiencing the Horizon seat and I have to admit it sets a new bar in terms of comfort. It’s a real shame the seat is not more popular with airlines. I made sure to select a window-side seat, which I prefer, as you’re protected from the aisle by your console table. However, all seats feature fully closing doors and these are also very comfortable, as I experienced on my return home.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

The illuminated walls are particularly cool at night; turn on the ‘do not disturb’ button and your seat number will go red:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Air India’s business class is incredibly private thanks to the walls and doors which are noticeably higher than on most suites (certainly higher than BA’s Club Suite, which I can see over the top of when sitting!)

Each seat comes with a spacious console table as well as a very deep storage cupboard:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

and

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Headphone jacks, USB ports and a universal mains power socket are all within easy reach here, just under the storage unit.

In-suite lighting is a delight thanks to the customisable lamp as well as ambient light in other areas.

Underneath the side console you’ll find a very useful pull out drawer which is perfect for storing shoes. This was one of my favourite features as all too often business class suites do not have a good place to store footwear and you end up stumbling over them!

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

In front of you is a large 21” HD touch-screen, underneath which is a large tray table with a unique mechanism that doesn’t fold in half but instead pivots up. The tray table is very sturdy and can be moved to any position – there are no presets – which makes it very useful.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Underneath the tray table is a spacious foot coffin. Whilst not as quite big as on my recent Japan Airlines flight, it was still noticeably larger than many and was perfectly comfortable when sleeping.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Meanwhile, to the right of this, you’ll find a full-height wardrobe designed for hanging coats and jackets. I didn’t need this – I hadn’t packed one! – but it is useful if you do.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

The seat is incredibly comfortable both seated and in bed mode; I was shocked how good it was. The only thing missing are armrests.

The seat converts to a 198cm (6’6”) bed when fully flat which was more than enough for me – and I’m 188cm. The padding is good but even better with Air India’s excellent mattress pad, duvet and pillow.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Air India amenities

Speaking of the duvet and pillow, it’s worth mentioning just how extensive Air India’s amenities are. Waiting at my seat was the mattress pad, cleverly folded into large pillow; this was accompanied by a throw adorned with a beautiful Indian motif.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

On the foot stool was a soft, thick microfibre blanket as well as another pillow for sleeping on.

That’s not all. Within the shoe drawer you’ll find a pair of slippers, and crew come around offering Tumi pyjamas. Yes, on an eight-hour day flight. The PJs are incredibly soft and comfortable and notably better than, for example, Qatar Airways’ pyjamas.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Then you have the amenity kit, which is handed out by crew after boarding. These are in collaboration with Ferragamo and come, like many luxury purchases, in a cloth bag with a purple mandala print.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Inside, you’ll find a large navy faux-leather washbag containing large tubes of body lotion, hand cream and lip balm as well as ear plugs, a dental kit, socks and an eye mask:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Inflight entertainment and wifi on Air India

The large 21” touch screen is loaded to the brim with films and TV. The catalogue is extensive with a wide selection of both Hollywood and Bollywood new releases and favourites, helpfully sorted into categories. A partnership with DC and Universal rather than Disney means there seems to be more Batman / Superman / DC Extended Universe content than Marvel.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

The provided headphones are good although not mind-blowing; Bluetooth pairing was not available.

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Air India is also offering free wifi to all passengers. Although the airline claims this is for an ‘inaugural period’ I would be surprised to see it charge in the future, given that the future of in-flight wifi is free.

I spent most of the flight working on my laptop and connected to the wifi. It was a bit hit-and-miss, although it worked the majority of the time.

Air India food and service

Service on Air India started with the offer of a hot or cold towel – your choice. This was followed by a pre-departure drink with champagne, orange juice or kiwi juice:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Air India serves Laurent-Perrier on board:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

There was a second drinks service after takeoff and breakfast orders were taken. Air India was serving two meals on this seven and a half hour day flight: breakfast and lunch. Breakfast is smaller as lunch was the main meal.

Breakfast is customisable with a choice of smoothies, pastries, cereals and yoghurts as well as a choice of three mains:

  • Poached burford brown eggs with grilled sourdough toast, BBQ chicken sausage, tomato ragout, cumin spinach and cucumber mint yoghurt raita
  • Kanda Poha, a traditional Maharashtrian preparation of curry leaves tempered beaten rice cooked with onions and spices with beetroot cutlet, pan grilled flat bread, served with a tangy lentil and vegetable stew, pickle & coconut chutney
  • Bircher Apple Muesli: overnight soaked oats mixed with yoghurt, served with walnut crumble, mixed berries and orange compote

I went for the first option, the poached eggs, which were just a smidge overcooked (no runny yolk!):

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Notice the salt and pepper shaker on the left, which is inspired by a classic tiffin lunch box of yore.

Crew came round during the service to ofer a croissant, danish or muffin:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

After breakfast I decided to take a nap given the early start I had that morning. As I mentioned above, the bed is very comfortable and Air India offers a turndown service – just ask the crew to make your bed. The Tumi pyjamas are also very comfortable.

Several hours of sleep later I decided to have one of the inflight cocktails which was served with caramel popcorn and some crisps:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

These cocktails appear to be made fresh on board because I heard the shaker rattle away in the galley!

The iconic Maharajah has largely been phased out from Air India’s branding, but you can still find him on the tea set:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Around two and a half hours before landing crew came round taking orders for lunch. I asked if I could delay mine until about ninety minutes before landing and they were happy to do so.

There was a choice of two starters:

  • Chicken Tikka with mango chutney with pumpkin and tomato chaat, pickled beetroot and edible flowers
  • Labneh cream with marinated red and yellow cherry tomatoes grilled courgette, pickled shallot rings and grilled artichoke quarters

I opted for Chicken Tikka – delicious and beautifully presented with slices of red and white radish:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

For main courses there was a choice of four dishes, the latter two being vegetarian:

  • Grilled Suffolk chicken: chicken breast cooked in mild sauce and grilled, served with chicken jus, braised vegetables with lentils, grilled baby leeks, seared shallot leaf and diced carrots
  • Lamb Kundan Kaliyan: succulent lamb in a creamy saffron enhanced tomato onion sauce, served with aromatic rice, potatoes and aubergine tempered with pickle spices, mixed lentils cooked with spices, & cucumber and mint yoghurt raita
  • Shahi Paneer: Indian cottage cheese simmered in a rich sauce enriched with nuts, cream, and yoghurt, served with aromatic rice, potatoes and aubergine tempered with pickle spices, mixed lentils cooked with spices, & cucumber and mint yoghurt raita
  • Scialatielli Pasta: short thick pasta, served with piperade sauce prepared with tomatoes, onion and peppers, and chargrilled baby courgette

This time I chose the lamb Kundan Kaliyan which had clearly been plated up in the galley rather than reheated as one item. It even came with a tin-foil wrapped naan:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

Finally, for dessert, there were another four options:

  • Chocolate Espresso Ganache: decadent cake slice topped with espresso ganache, with red berry coulis and strawberry slice
  • Saffron Phirni with Mini Gulab Jamun: reduced milk dumplings soaked in sugar syrup, placed on saffron rice porridge
  • Cheese Plate: Brie, Mature Cheddar, and Old Amsterdam with a date, walnut and cranberry wedge, dried apricots and crackers
  • Fresh sliced fruit

I thought I’d try something new with the saffron phirni. It was delicious with three round milk dumplings swimming in a sugary sauce:

Review: Air India's new A350 business class from London to Delhi

It’s good to see that these dishes are being plated up freshly in the galley, rather than being reheated in the dish, which affects the presentation and flavour.

Conclusion

As you have hopefully noticed, the experience onboard Air India’s new flagship aircraft is nothing short of excellent. It is, without a doubt, one of the best business class flights I have enjoyed in recent memory.

The experience was superb from start to finish, from the private seats to the plush bedding, amenities and tasty and beautifully presented food.

I want to give a special shout out to the crew on my flight who were exceptional, offering a personalised service and making recommendations every step of the way.

No doubt the influence of Singapore Airlines (as a 25% shareholder) has had an effect, although none of this would be possible without staff across the company fully backing the airline’s transformation. From the headquarters outside Delhi to the cabin crew on board, it is clear everyone is motivated and proud to be part of the next phase of the national carrier.

You can find out more about Air India’s A350 on its website here.

The main UK booking website is here.

Head for Points made a financial contribution to the Woodland Trust as part of this trip. The Woodland Trust creates and manages forests in the UK in accordance with the Woodland Carbon Code.

Comments (154)

  • Hardy says:

    Like everyone said, it’s the inconsistency of the whole thing, with very extreme variations in hard product. It’s not a 2-2-2 Vs 1-2-1 equipment swap sadness, it’s a piece of ancient ripped up garbage in case you have a equipment swap. Even the ife doesn’t work, tray tables don’t work. I flew first in their ex-etihad 777…6 out of the 8 first class suits were in, with two other with tape all over and they were selling $6k tickets for these.. business was not any better.

    This is why the million dollar question, “is it better to be 60% good 100% of the time or 99% good 15% of the time?”

    • Hardy says:

      *inoperable

    • Rhys says:

      Well yes, which is why in my interview yesterday Campbell and I spoke about the refurbishment program….you can’t refit an entire fleet overnight.

    • Talay says:

      Come back in 5 years and see where they are and if they have maintained the couple of decent planes they now have.

      I doubt it.

      • Rhys says:

        TATA and SIA were running Vistara, an Indian airline, for the past decade. Vistara got good reviews by all accounts, with well maintained aircraft. It’s not as if they’re starting from scratch and have no experience.

        • vlcnc says:

          Problem though Vistara are not running the show, they have been taken over by Air India effectively so don’t expect any of that quality to come through.

  • Inman says:

    ….aaaand here’s my review of the Air India flight from London to Delhi in Jan 2025 on Premium Economy. No interviews with CEOs, no blogs or youtube, I’m just a lowly passenger. Not very important.

    The chaos starts at Heathrow Terminal 2. Massive crowds gather in one small area, as if an Indian celebrity cricketer has come to town. Only difference is everyone is bumping each other with their baggage trolleys, like a game of bumper cars. Crowd spills out of the doors. I join the game. In India, you don’t ask questions, you just join the chaos. After manipulating my trolley and bumping in to a million others, I find the reason. Apparently, AI wants economy passengers to print the baggage tags themselves using the machines and then go to the check-in counters to check in, effectively creating two queues instead of one. And I also find that I joined the wrong queue. The PE queue was not even accessible because of the crowds.

    Fast forward, I’m inside the flight. It was a 4-year old Vistara 787 (the original SIA-Tata airline). Few mins later, there’s a game of musical chairs happenning around me. I inquire why. Four out of the 28 seats/IFE in PE are broken in one way or the other and the passengers wish to change seats. Luckily for me, my seat was fine. One crew member is desperately trying to find them seating. I also notice that they had placed two statues of beautiful Indian goddesses on both aisles. Oh hang on a min, my eyesight needs to be checked. That’s two crew members completely ignorant to everything that’s going around them, including the plight of their colleague.

    There’s a menu on the seats. Chicken Jalfrezi. I love Chicken Jalfrezi. But what I get, is laced with a tonne of pepper. I ask them whether AI has excess stocks of pepper. Their response was “the menu is wrong sir! This is Chicken Kalimirchi”…. Need to discipline that menu card, Campbell!

    Sun rises and I’m ready for the brekkie. You really can’t go wrong with omelettes. Except for one small problem. The omelettes never arrived for PE passengers but economy got their full breakfast. One passenger was pretty annoyed about it but the two statues remained stationary.

    Delhi airport is another level of horror. There is a good 40-min walk from gates to security to gates. And I walk very very fast. Lesson – never fly AI if the transit is less than 2 hours.

    I can write more but hit the word limit 🙂

    • John says:

      The check in thing seems to happen with most airlines outside their home location these days

    • Magic Mike says:

      I don’t dispute the flight experience but having flown in and out of DEL T3 recently I was pleasantly surprised. OK maybe a long walk but it’s clean tidy decent facilities and the toilets put Heathrow’s stinky latrines to shame.

    • vlcnc says:

      I don’t doubt this is as Rhys’s honest review – I genuinely like your content on HfP, but the above is actually more reflective of the reality of Air India.

      • Rhys says:

        Both are true. The ‘reality’ of Air India is that it is halfway through a transformation program. It’s naive to think they will go from 0 to 100 overnight. Nevertheless, these A350 services are very good indeed.

        • vlcnc says:

          It was good indeed on your flight – and given you met the CEO I don’t doubt they made sure it was even if it was not a paid promotion. The point is this “excellent” quality is rare. Air India is famous for rarely being good even during this so-called transformation – and those A350’s will be battered within 9 months as most of their planes are because they simply lack any quality or care.

          • Rhys says:

            Air India’s first A350 has been flying since December 2023. The aircraft I flew one were delivered in March and May last year.

      • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

        You could say the same about all airlines who are always in some sort of transition.

        Whether it’s BA and Club Suites, LH and Allegris and AY and the ‘sofa’ suite for example.

        And service issues like broken IFE and incorrect menus happen with all airlines.

        This doesn’t discount someone’s bad experience but just reflects the realities of transitioning airline products.

    • Zain says:

      @Inman
      You’ve got a way with words! Your description of the two Indian goddesses aka crew had me burst out laughing in the office!

  • CSbob says:

    Did HfP get paid writing this article?

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      If they did it would have been mentioned very clearly at the start.

      @Rob is very strict on that.

    • Rhys says:

      Nope. Just my genuine experience 🙂

    • Rob says:

      As you should know there is an automatic ban placed on people who libellously accuse us of breaking the law by running paid-for content which is not labelled.

  • Mark says:

    Was there a wine list?

  • Dominic says:

    Excellent review, Rhys. Feedback from commenters is laughable, as usual. Promising improvements – as others have said, the consistency is a huge issue, and the very limited roll-out at present – alongside the less tangible soft product side of things.

    You could probably offer everyone a free Q Suite flight and some people would complain it isn’t SQ… 🙂

    • Dominic says:

      On that note… has anyone had the displeasure of Qatar Airways from LHR T4? if you don’t have status, the check-in process is arguably the worst I’ve come across.

      Online check-in gets you the privilege of queuing in the exact same queue as everyone else, and a bizarre system of utilizing machines for baggage to then queue again to drop your bags immediately afterwards.

      • Spike Spiegel says:

        I had the displeasure of Qatar Airways T4. Madness – flying to Doha to visit my parents for October half term with the family in economy and it was absolute bedlam. Online check in seems to do nothing and you have to join a never ending meandering queue – when you first see it it’s crazy (we were flying in the morning) – you join it and think it’s ridiculously long. Then as you’re in the queue they keep extending it like a snake from an old Nokia phone turning back on itself – you start to feel that you’re glad you joined the queue when you did as the terminal will run out of space. Finally when you get through this nonsense and scan your passports and obtain passes the process starts again at another queue. Honestly, this put us off flying Qatar in economy again as due to the number of flights leaving it really was crazy and I share Dominic’s pain. The stinger is you can see the non-existent premium queue in plain sight just to rub salt in the wound. In contrast my SQ flight a few weeks ago in T2 was a breeze and within 20 minutes we were all done and in a PP lounge.

        • Dominic says:

          Exactly my experience! A real nightmare – I have equally stopped flying QR for this reason. It’s a truly bizarre process, and I don’t really understand why they’ve developed it in this way.

          Ended up with a credit card to get status on another airline after one particularly cumbersome QR process making me think I never want to go through it again (but then even without status.. no ‘good’ airline I have ever flown beyond Qatar has such an insane system).

      • John says:

        Happens with most airlines these days

      • Inman says:

        I did fly QR last year on Biz. They have/had a dedicated check in area for Biz/First customers where you are seated till your turn with refreshments and all that. It so happened that one of my bags was 33kg and I had to transfer things to the other bag. They have a private area to do that. I’m not sure if all of that has changed in the last year.
        The only problem I faced in QR (B77W with Qsuites) was me placing the laptop bag in the footwell area and reclining the seat, causing it to get stuck.

        • Dominic says:

          This is specific to the Economy experience – I’m sure that their premium experience is much better!

          • Spike Spiegel says:

            Sounds like Dominic and I experienced the same crazy checking in experience – this seemed to take close to two hours! And as Inman says, the premium experience can be visualised by those of us in the snaking economy queue – trust me, we could see you through the “privacy grill” enjoying your seats and refreshments! Maybe it’s by design so that we choose to pay to become “premium passengers” next time!

          • Rhys says:

            Qatar is always like this. It can be difficult to get to the premium check-in – requires ducking under tensa barriers sometimes!

          • Novice says:

            Spike, I actually like this idea that economy should feel completely different to business/first. Because you should get what you pay for. A lot of times, as a business passenger I am not happy if I get an economy experience because I have paid a lot more but some airlines don’t seem to understand that.

          • Dominic says:

            Novice – not sure an economy experience has to include truly woeful check-in! All in favour of an elevated experience for premium cabins – but I also don’t expect to wait 90 mins (particularly after online check-in!) just to get to security…

          • Novice says:

            Dominic, try living in the north. We have to put up with crap lounges, s*** security etc even when flying business class. So, count yourself lucky that once you are through security then your experience becomes better than the northern business passengers despite travelling economy.

  • Sika Thali says:

    I would like to ask whether this was an Air India invite to be reviewed or did HFP use points/pay for the ticket in order to review the flight?

    It is not mentioned anywhere in the review.

    • Rob says:

      If you read the piece yesterday you’d know a group was invited to Delhi to see Campbell.

    • Rhys says:

      Apologies, it was clear in my interview yesterday but I have made it clearer in the article above.

      • Sika Thali says:

        Thanks Rhys 😊

        If you get a chance will you ask the CEO whether they are serious about their F product?

        I just flew LHR BOM LHR one way F the other J.

        Apart from the seat, F had no differentiation – EXACTLY the same menu as J, same amenity kit, same PJ’s.

        Thx

        • Rhys says:

          If you read my interview yesterday you’d see they are keeping it around and hope to introduce new seats in a few years. I suspect until there is some fleet consistency there will be little differentiation.

          • Duck Ling says:

            Reading Sika’s comment they seem to be referring to the soft product, not the seat.

            What is needed is an enhanced soft product compared to business – catering, amenity kit, PJ’s. At the moment they are all identical to Business. You’d think this would be a pretty quick fix.

            It isn’t actually the seats that need differentiating – in fact they ARE the only point of differentiation.

          • Rhys says:

            Yes, and my point is that they probably don’t want to do that until they have a more consistent cabin. My understanding is that first class will slowly dwindle as current aircraft are refurbished, with a new first class introduced down the line a bit, although it’s not entirely clear.

  • David says:

    Just completed 4 Air India sectors in last 6 months. On one sector 8 business class seats were out of service- we had 2- was advised that they would be manually moved, crew couldn’t be bothered until flight manager called. Could have rerouted us but didn’t bother fixing it until boarding. Other three sectors had various seat/entertainment failures.

    No champagne or wine loaded on another flight and food wasn’t reheated which was a food safety issue on another. Staff disappear after service completed.

    Business Checkin at all airports chaos and poorly staffed (usually 3rd party who really couldn’t care). Easyjet was more organised.

    Customer service/recovery poor- still waiting on correct compensation from faulty seats. Other issues have been ignored completely by customer services.

    Lounge in Delhi now closed for refurb (it was beyond basic last trip ) nobody bothered explaining where to go instead at checkin- very poor. Replacement lounge had no food available as they clear it all away as they change from breakfast to lunch- exactly when the AI planes are departing!

    Air India needs to start fixing the seats on the planes it already has. This was one of their flagship routes DEL to SYD. Flying a plane with nearly 40per of the business class cabin inop is ridiculous.

    The staff also need seriously retrained at all levels and customers interactions need followed up with proper responses when things go wrong.

    • Rhys says:

      They ARE refurbishing the existing fleet. Widebodies start this month and they hope to be completed in c. 2 years.

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