On October 13, Finnair grounded eight A321 aircraft after the original seat-cover maker told the airline the impact of laundering on fire protection had not been verified in the way required. The carrier had cancelled roughly 70 flights since then, disrupting the travel plans of about 11,000 customers. The jets are slowly being brought back into service as the airline expects all eight to fly again by the end of October.

What actually went wrong
When Finnair caught wind that washing their seat covers may be degrading their fire safety, they acted swiftly. Eight planes have been grounded, with about 1,700 covers being replaced.
The covers were made by a long-standing Finnair partner, using specs from the original seat maker. Finnair says the covers were washed according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Seats are usually laundered about every two years. Washing is a standard method across the fleet.
Still, when the manufacturer flagged that the effect of washing on fire resistance had not been properly verified, Finnair grounded the aircraft while replacements were installed.

Why this matters
Aircraft interiors need strict, tested fire protection. It is rare for a routine cleaning practice to trigger a safety pause, but regulators and airlines treat these things seriously. In plain terms, Finnair chose caution over convenience because passenger safety is not negotiable. However, the manufacturer should have known of this issue without giving it the all clear, raising questions about safety procedures and standards across the board.
Pekka Korhonen, SVP Technical Operations at Finnair, released the following statement:
“We are deeply sorry for the inconvenience and disruption this has caused to our customers. The safe operation of our flights is the foundation of everything we do. Once we received information that the impact of washing on the fire protection of the seat covers had not been verified in the required manner, it was clear that the aircraft had to remain on the ground until the issue was resolved.”

How Finnair is fixing it
New seat covers are being fitted now. The airline is sourcing replacements from several suppliers to speed up the work. Two leased aircraft with crew have joined the network to reduce cancellations while the A321 aircraft are out of service.
Even so, passengers may still see overbookings, changes of operating carrier or a small number of last-minute cancellations until the full A321 group is back.
Finnair says it will contact customers directly about changes. If you have a travel booked with the airline in the coming days, check your booking, and keep an eye on messages from Finnair. If your trip is time-sensitive, consider flexible rebooking options or alternative routes.
This is one of those rare maintenance hiccups that became a customer headache because safety checks flagged a verification gap. Finnair has moved quickly, and the expectation is that normal service will resume by the end of October.
For now, travellers should stay alert and expect some disruption, but not hold any overall fears; airlines always put your safety first.
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