Aerostructures Market Size, Trends | Growth Report 2034

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This versatile research report is presenting crucial details on market relevant information, harping on ample minute details encompassing a multi-dimensional market that collectively maneuver growth in the global Aerostructures market.

Nice — below is a compact, source-backed company reference and market brief for the Aerostructures market covering company values and each of the headings you requested. I pulled recent company reports, market studies and news so the figures and trends are up to date. If you want this exported as a CSV/Excel or a one-page slide, tell me which and I’ll generate it immediately.

This versatile research report is presenting crucial details on market relevant information, harping on ample minute details encompassing a multi-dimensional market that collectively maneuver growth in the global Aerostructures market.

Read complete report at: https://www.thebrainyinsights.com/report/aerostructures-market-13974

This holistic report presented by the report is also determined to cater to all the market specific information and a take on business analysis and key growth steering best industry practices that optimize million-dollar opportunities amidst staggering competition in Aerostructures market.


Company reference (key players & recent public figures)

Company / businessRelevant datapoint (most recent public figure)Source
Spirit AeroSystemsRevenue (FY 2024): $6.33B; company reported liquidity/going-concern issues and large restructuring activity in 2024.Spirit AeroSystems 2024 Annual Report; press coverage.
GKN AerospaceSales (2024): £3.47B (GKN Aerospace reporting for 2024).GKN Aerospace corporate site / 2024 sales statement. 
Safran (nacelles & structures businesses)Group revenue (2024): €27,317M — Safran reports strong OE volumes; nacelles/aerostructure-adjacent businesses showed strong growth in 2024.Safran 2024 results
LatecoèreRevenue (FY 2024): €705.8M (reported strong growth in 2024).Latecoère FY2024 results. 
FACCAerostructures segment revenue (2024): €350.1M (aerostructures division results shown in FY2024 annual report).FACC 2024 Annual Report.
AernnovaLeading aerostructures supplier (EMEA/AMERICAS footprint); referenced in rating/industry coverage — (public filings & rating agency commentary; 2024 activity noted).Aernnova corporate / Fitch commentary.
Triumph GroupContinuing operations revenue ~ $1.2B (2024 continuing business) — Triumph is a diversified aero supplier with aerostructures capability.Triumph Group sustainability / financials summary. 

 


Market size & recent development

  • Market estimates vary by methodology:  places the global aerostructures market at ~USD 116.1B (2023) and projects growth to ~USD 210.7B by 2032.

  •  gives a nearer-term snapshot: USD 64.9B in 2025 with a ~7.4% CAGR to 2030, driven by narrow-body production ramps and composite penetration. 

  • Industry context (2023–2025): OEM production ramps (narrow-body recovery), defense modernization, growth in aftermarket/MRO and rising composite use have combined to increase tier-1 orderbooks — but supplier liquidity, supply-chain constraints and some OEM execution issues created pockets of stress (e.g., Spirit’s 2024 liquidity concerns and Boeing/Supply interactions).


Drivers

  1. Airline fleet growth & narrow-body production ramps (A320neo / 737MAX families): higher wing, fuselage and pylon orders lift tier-1 demand.

  2. Lightweighting & composite adoption (more CFRP components in wings, tails, and fuselage sections) — drives demand for specialist tooling, large autoclaves, and composite-capable suppliers.

  3. Defense & regional aircraft programs and aftermarket/MRO expansion (aging fleets require structural repairs and replacements).


Restraints

  • Supply-chain bottlenecks and material costs (composites, titanium, aluminium alloys) — capacity constraints and raw-material price volatility pressure margins. 

  • Supplier liquidity / execution risk — some independent suppliers experienced cash-flow stress in 2024 requiring restructuring or support (example: Spirit).

  • Cyclical exposure to OEM production guidance — any slowdown or build-rate cut has immediate downstream impact on tier-1 revenue.


Regional segmentation analysis

  • North America — major OEM/tier-1 cluster (Spirit, Triumph, latecoere sites in US) with large aftermarket and defense presence. Recovery in US narrow-body builds strongly influences North American demand.

  • Europe — strong presence of GKN Aerospace, Latecoère, Aernnova, FACC and others — Europe is a significant design & manufacturing hub, especially for composite wing parts and tail sections. 

  • Asia-Pacific — fastest growth in demand (air traffic recovery, OEM final assembly and local content push), and expanding supplier base across China, Japan and SE Asia.

  • Rest of world (LATAM / MEA) — smaller volumes today but growing as regional aviation recovers and MRO capability expands.


Emerging trends

  • Large composite part manufacture & automation — automated fibre placement (AFP), out-of-autoclave processes and advanced curing are moving from R&D into production.

  • Vertical integration & OEM moves — OEMs and big suppliers reassess vertical exposure (outsourcing vs in-house) as risk management; supply agreements and buybacks (and strategic acquisitions) continue.

  • Aftermarket / MRO value capture — as fleets age and traffic recovers, structural repair, life-extension kits and AM parts become sizable revenue streams.

  • Electrification / eVTOL / urban air mobility — new airframe types create niche aerostructures opportunities for lightweight panels and novel assemblies.


Top use cases (product / program focus)

  1. Fuselage sections & barrel assemblies (narrow-body and wide-body programs). 

  2. Wing components (skins, spars, control surfaces) — composite wing boxes and winglets.

  3. Empennage / tail assemblies and structural pylons/struts. Nacelle / thrust reverser subassemblies (often in adjacent supplier portfolios like Safran).


Major challenges

  • Capital intensity & long lead times for tooling, autoclaves and qualification of large composite parts.

  • Talent & skills gap for composite engineering and automated manufacturing — recruiting and retraining are necessary.

  • Program concentration risk: suppliers that rely heavily on one OEM or a small set of programs face large revenue swings if build rates change. 


Attractive opportunities

  • Capturing aftermarket / MRO structural repair revenue as passenger traffic and flight cycles recover.

  • Investments in composite large-part capability & automation — companies that successfully scale AFP and automated layup win higher-value contracts.

  • Defense & special mission airframes — less cyclical demand and higher margins in certain defense aerostructure programs.


Key factors of market expansion

  • Sustained OEM production ramps (narrow-body fleets) and healthy airline replacement demand.

  • Adoption of advanced materials + manufacturing automation that reduce weight and life-cycle costs for operators.

  • Stable supply chains and improved supplier financing — reducing liquidity risk among tier-1s and enabling long-term investments.

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