Iberia launched direct service between Madrid and Toronto this week, and the market responded immediately — the inaugural flight posted a load factor above 95%, a strong signal that demand for a nonstop Spain-Canada connection was real and waiting.
The route operates five times weekly through the summer, adding more than 37,000 seats between the two cities. But the bigger story is the aircraft doing the flying. Iberia is operating the service with the Airbus A321XLR, the narrow-body jet that’s rewriting assumptions about what transatlantic flying requires. Iberia became the world’s first airline to commercially operate the XLR back in November 2024, and Toronto is the latest proof of concept — long-haul range, meaningfully lower fuel burn than a widebody, and a 182-seat cabin split between Business and Economy.
For passengers connecting onward, the Madrid hub opens up 46 destinations within Spain and more than 60 across Europe. Iberia is also dangling its Stopover Hola Madrid program — up to nine nights in the Spanish capital at no additional airfare before continuing the journey.
Why It Matters: The A321XLR is quietly reshaping which city pairs can support nonstop transatlantic service. If Iberia’s Toronto numbers hold, expect more carriers to accelerate XLR orders and more mid-size markets to land direct European connections they couldn’t justify with a widebody.
Source: Iberia



