Air Canada is using new-generation narrowbody aircraft to push its leisure network further and more efficiently, with the carrier announcing a winter 2026-2027 expansion to Tenerife in the Canary Islands. These routes will be joining new and added services across Latin America, Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean. These are all high-yield markets, and these decisions comfortably align with the carrier’s unique operating philosophy.
The standout move in the airline’s announcement is the launch of the only nonstop flights from North America to Tenerife, which will be enabled by the incoming Airbus A321XLR. At the same time, Air Canada says it is growing its Airbus A220 and Air Canada Rouge (its budget subsidiary) bases at Vancouver International Airport (YVR). The objective of that expansion is to help unlock more nonstop service deeper into Latin American sun markets. The overall strategy is about range, flexibility, and better matching capacity with overall demand.
A Look At The Specifics Of The Airline’s Tenerife Launch
Air Canada’s Tenerife launch is significantly more ambitious than just a leisure-oriented network addition. Rather, it creates the only nonstop link between North America and Tenerife South Airport (TFS). The airline will be offering service from both Montreal Trudeau International Airport (YUL) and Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ). From Montreal, Air Canada Flight 956 will depart on Saturdays at 9:00 PM and touch down in Tenerife at 9:00 AM the following morning.
The return journey will be Air Canada Flight 957, departing TFS on Sundays at 10:55 AM and touching down in Montreal at 2:10 PM. From Toronto, Air Canada Flight 954 operates Thursdays and Sundays, leaving YYZ at 8:35 PM and arriving at 9:00 AM the next day. Return flight Air Canada 955 leaves TFS Mondays and Fridays at 10:55 AM and reaches Toronto by 2:50 PM. These routes are scheduled for service in winter 2026 and will be operated by the airline’s brand-new Airbus A321XLR fleet.
A Deeper Look At The A220 Service Expansions
The Airbus A220-linked component of this story relates to the airline’s growing ambitions in Vancouver. According to the carrier’s own framing, a growing Airbus A220 base at YVR, alongside a larger presence of the airline’s low-cost subsidiary, Air Canada Rouge, is helping to unlock more nonstop service to deeper parts of Latin America and Mexico. This allows the airline to be more competitive with players like WestJet, as the carrier has previously forced passengers to inefficiently connect through hubs in Eastern Canada.
The headline network additions here include Vancouver to Mazatlan (MZT), which will be launching with twice-weekly service on Tuesdays and Fridays between December 15, 2026, and April 9, 2027. Flights will launch from Vancouver to Liberia (LIR) in Costa Rica on a four-times per week basis during a similar period from December 13 to April 12.
Other routes include thrice-weekly service from Vancouver to Monterrey (MTY) between December 3 and April 24, and flights from Vancouver to Puerto Escondido (PXM), which will be four times per week between December 7 and April 10. Air Canada did not assign the A220 to each route individually in its release to the media, but it clearly tied this West Coast leisure growth to its expanding A220 operations.
Air Canada Adds 13 New International Routes & 4 Destinations
This represents the airline’s largest-ever winter schedule for Latin America.
What Does All Of This Mean For Air Canada?
For Air Canada, this expansion is about smarter network economics. The A321XLR gives the airline a way to open thinner, long-haul leisure routes, such as Toronto Pearson (YYZ) and Montreal (YUL) to Tenerife South, without the risk of deploying a much larger widebody.
At the same time, the airline is expanding its base in Vancouver in order to support more flying to high-yield markets in Latin America. This move means the airline is making an effort to improve aircraft right-sizing, seasonal flexibility, and broader ability to chase profitable leisure demand from multiple Canadian gateways rather than relying only on traditional hubs.
It also strengthens Air Canada’s competitive position. The Tenerife flights are being marketed as the only nonstop service between North America and the Canary Islands, allowing the airline to offer a differentiated product in a crowded winter sun market. More broadly, this shows Air Canada using new-generation aircraft to add routes.







