Airlines celebrated with America250 with special liveries for the United States’ 250th semiquincentennial anniversary on July 4, 2026. The official corporate airline partner of the national America250 organisation is American Airlines, alongside several other major domestic carriers introducing their own designs.

United Airlines
The “Stars and Stripes” livery features a deep blue fuselage, diagonal red-and-white stripes, 50 stars representing the states, and internal plaques dedicated to the airline’s veteran crew members.
Active aircraft:
- Boeing 737-800 (N78285).
- Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner (N91007).
United operates its commemorative livery across a dual domestic and international network, with the primary hubs being: Washington Dulles (IAD) (where the widebody was officially unveiled), Houston Intercontinental (IAH), Newark (EWR), Chicago O’Hare (ORD), and Denver (DEN).

Southwest Airlines
The design showcases a red, white, and blue American flag pattern, 13 stars for the original colonies, engine cowlings styled after the Betsy Ross flag, and text from the Declaration of Independence. Southwest also launched a companion flag-themed livery this year called “Liberty One”.
Active aircraft: Boeing 737 MAX 8 (N1776R).
Primary Hubs: Dallas Love Field (DAL), Denver (DEN), Las Vegas (LAS), Chicago Midway (MDW), Baltimore/Washington (BWI), and Nashville (BNA).
Bob Jordan, president & chief executive officer at Southwest Airlines stated:
“Southwest is proud to be a part of the 250th national celebration and to honour the same spirit of innovation, resilience, and optimism that has shaped our country and our Company.”

American Airlines
- Embraer 175 (N341MB) – Operated by subsidiary Envoy Air.
- Boeing 737-800 (N840NN).
Primary Hubs: Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW), Miami International (MIA), Charlotte Douglas (CLT), and Chicago O’Hare (ORD).
American Airlines CEO Robert Isom stated:
“As we celebrate our centennial, it’s especially meaningful to unveil an aircraft that honours our country’s 250th anniversary and the shared story of progress, perseverance and innovation that defines both America and our airline.”

JetBlue
JetBlue integrated its America250 celebration into its existing, beloved “Vets in Blue” veteran-tribute livery by splashing a large, celebratory “250” design overlay on the fuselage.
Active aircraft: Airbus A320 (N775JB).
Primary Hubs: New York John F. Kennedy (JFK), Boston Logan (BOS), Fort Lauderdale (FLL), and Orlando International (MCO).
Joanna Geraghty, chief executive officer, JetBlue, stated:
“As we mark America’s 250th anniversary, JetBlue is proud to celebrate the spirit of service, community and connection that has shaped our country,”

Delta Air Lines
Primary Hubs: Delta keeps this specific narrowbody rotating continuously on high-volume domestic city pairs connecting Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson (ATL), Minneapolis-St. Paul (MSP), Detroit Metropolitan (DTW), and Salt Lake City (SLC)

Alaska Airlines
Outfitted four of its existing “Honouring Those Who Serve” military-themed aircraft with new America250 boarding door decals. Alaska Airlines placed custom America250 boarding door decals on its active fleet of military-tribute aircraft rather than creating a singular new airframe.
Active aircraft:
- Boeing 737-900ER (N265AK).
- Boeing 737-800 (N570AS).
- Boeing 737 MAX 8 (N806AK).
- Embraer E175 (N651QX) – Operated by Horizon Air.
Primary Hubs: Routing in and out of Seattle-Tacoma (SEA), Portland (PDX), Anchorage (ANC), and Los Angeles (LAX).
Megan Ouellette, vice president of public and government affairs, Alaska Airlines, stated:
“Our independence wouldn’t exist without their service,”

Allegiant Air
Allegiant Air unveiled a full special-edition flag and stars design on an Airbus A320 featuring a “Freedom 250” logo on the engine cowlings. Allegiant utilises an out-and-back leisure routing style, meaning the plane typically returns to its home operating base every night.
Primary Hubs/Key Bases: Las Vegas Harry Reid International (LAS), as well as major Florida leisure bases like Orlando Sanford (SFB) and St. Pete-Clearwater (PIE).

Why The New Designs?
These designs are a massive, coordinated national celebration for the 250th anniversary of the United States. Airlines are using these unique aircraft designs to achieve several specific branding and historical goals, including honouring veterans and for more passenger engagement.
Instead of spending millions on entirely new paint jobs, carriers like JetBlue and Alaska Airlines intentionally chose to add the America250 designs to existing veteran-tribute aircraft. These liveries connects the country’s historical milestone directly with a tribute to the people who served it.
Special liveries generate massive social media buzz and media coverage. They appeal directly to aviation photographers who track, photograph, and share these distinct tail numbers online, giving the airlines highly visible, free publicity.
What do you think of these new designs? Have you spotted them yet? Let us know in the comments below!
