Boeing & Aerospace - Tygart Media

Category: Boeing & Aerospace

Paine Field, Boeing Everett, aerospace industry news, and workforce updates.

  • Boeing’s 737 North Line in Everett: What Local Businesses and Suppliers Need to Know

    Boeing’s 737 North Line in Everett: What Local Businesses and Suppliers Need to Know

    Boeing opening a new 737 MAX production line in Everett this summer isn’t just a manufacturing story — it’s an economic development event for Snohomish County’s business community.

    The North Line, set to open in summer 2026 at Boeing’s Everett campus, adds hundreds of direct jobs and ripples through the supply chain, real estate market, and service businesses that depend on the Boeing workforce. For Everett-area business owners and developers, here’s what to watch.

    Supply Chain Opportunity

    Boeing’s 737 MAX uses a different supply chain than the widebody programs currently assembled in Everett. The fuselage comes from Spirit AeroSystems (Kansas), wings from Renton (partially transferred via the 737 Wing Transport Tool), and major systems from a global supplier base. But local suppliers — machined parts, tooling, composite work, maintenance services, and logistics contractors — have benefited from Boeing’s Everett presence for decades.

    A new production line adds procurement volume. Paine Field’s industrial park, home to dozens of Boeing-adjacent manufacturers, will see increased activity. Small and mid-size suppliers with AS9100-certified operations should be watching Boeing’s Supplier Management portal for North Line sourcing opportunities. The North Line also creates demand for tooling maintenance, calibration services, and facility support that local industrial services companies can pursue.

    Workforce Demand and What It Means for Local Employers

    Hundreds of new Boeing hires competing in Snohomish County’s labor market means tightening competition for skilled trades — welders, electricians, quality technicians, and aerospace manufacturing workers. Boeing’s wage scales (IAM District 751 contract, 38% increases over four years from the 2024 agreement) are among the highest in the region for non-degreed production work.

    For non-aerospace employers competing for the same talent pool — healthcare, construction, manufacturing, hospitality — this creates upward pressure on wages. It also creates opportunity: businesses that serve Boeing workers (commute-corridor retail, childcare, restaurants near the campus, financial services) will see increased customer counts as new hires join the campus.

    Real Estate and Development Signal

    Boeing hiring in Everett means housing demand. The North Line is another demand signal on top of the waterfront’s Millwright District redevelopment, downtown’s Outdoor Event Center project, and a pipeline of new apartments. For commercial real estate — office space near the campus, retail in Mukilteo and Bayside, industrial near Paine Field — a workforce expansion supports occupancy and rent growth.

    The Everett waterfront is the largest adjacent development opportunity: the Port of Everett’s $1 billion Waterfront Place project, which includes the Millwright District (200+ multi-family housing units, 60,000 square feet of destination retail, 200,000 square feet of commercial space), is designed in part to capture the spending power of exactly this kind of workforce expansion.

    Frequently Asked Questions — For Business Owners

    How do I become a Boeing supplier for the 737 North Line in Everett?

    Boeing’s supplier qualification process runs through its Supplier Management organization. Start at boeing.com/company/supplier-resources. Qualification typically requires AS9100 or NADCAP certification depending on the work type. The Economic Alliance of Snohomish County (EASC) maintains aerospace supplier development resources and can connect local companies with Boeing supplier liaisons.

    What is the Economic Alliance Snohomish County’s role in the North Line?

    The Economic Alliance Snohomish County (EASC) tracks aerospace employment trends and advocates for Boeing’s continued presence in Snohomish County. EASC president Ray Stephanson has been a vocal advocate for the Boeing campus during uncertainty over the 777X timeline and the 2024 strike recovery. EASC publishes workforce and economic data useful for businesses planning hiring and expansion tied to Boeing’s activity.

    Does the North Line mean more activity at Paine Field (Snohomish County Airport)?

    Yes. As North Line production scales, Paine Field will see increased Boeing flight test and customer delivery activity for 737 MAX jets — adding to the widebody deliveries already occurring there. Paine Field also hosts commercial airline service via Alaska Airlines and United, and North Line worker commutes may increase general aviation and shuttle traffic at the airport.

    Related Exploring Everett coverage: Boeing’s 737 North Line Is Coming to Everett This Summer

  • Boeing’s 737 North Line Is Coming to Everett This Summer — Here’s What It Means for the City

    Boeing’s 737 North Line Is Coming to Everett This Summer — Here’s What It Means for the City

    Boeing’s 737 North Line Is Coming to Everett This Summer — Here’s What It Means for the City

    For decades, if you worked on a 737 for Boeing, you worked in Renton. That changes this summer.

    Boeing is preparing to open its first-ever 737 MAX production line at the Everett factory campus — a move that adds hundreds of jobs, expands Snohomish County’s aerospace footprint, and repositions the Everett plant as a dual-program facility capable of producing both widebody and narrowbody jets under one roof.

    The new line, called the North Line, will occupy space within Boeing’s massive Everett campus and will be capable of building all 737 MAX variants — the MAX 8, MAX 9, and the yet-to-be-certified MAX 10. Production is expected to begin this summer in a Low Rate Initial Production (LRIP) phase, with full integration into Boeing’s broader 737 MAX flow to follow.

    Why Everett, Why Now

    Boeing’s Renton factory has been under intense pressure to increase 737 MAX production rates — a demand that intensified after the 2024 labor strike that halted Puget Sound production for nearly two months and set delivery schedules back by months. The FAA has capped Boeing’s 737 MAX production at 38 aircraft per month as part of an ongoing safety oversight agreement; Boeing’s commercial future depends on raising that rate to 47 per month and eventually beyond.

    The North Line in Everett is Boeing’s answer to the capacity problem. Rather than cramming more production into the Renton facility — one of the busiest aircraft assembly sites on earth — Boeing is expanding geographic capacity by adding a second line 30 miles north, in a factory already staffed with tens of thousands of experienced aerospace workers.

    The Everett campus currently hosts final assembly for Boeing’s widebody jets — the 787 Dreamliner and the 777X program. Adding 737 production brings a new dimension to a campus that was already the largest building by volume in the world.

    How the North Line Works

    Unlike the Renton facility, where wings and fuselages come together in a more conventional flow, Everett’s North Line relies on a new logistics innovation: the 737 Wing Transport Tool. Partially completed wings will be built in Renton, then transported to Everett for final assembly — a cross-site workflow that Boeing has carefully engineered to maintain quality standards across both locations.

    Workforce on the North Line is a blend of new hires and experienced employees transferring from Renton and Moses Lake. New hires complete a 12-week Foundational Training program before beginning structured on-the-job training alongside veteran assemblers. The approach is deliberate — Boeing’s production leader for the Everett line, Jennifer Boland-Masterson, described the ramp-up as running, not sprinting: “You don’t start with a marathon.”

    Early North Line workers include Jaden Myers, hired in late 2025 to install the dorsal fin assembly in Flow Day 1, and Alondra Ponce, an electrician also joining at the first flow position. Both went through the Foundational Training in Renton before coming to Everett. John V., a nearly 40-year Boeing veteran who previously coached quality work in Everett, now serves as FAA and customer coordinator for the new line.

    What It Means for Everett

    The North Line’s most immediate local impact is jobs — hundreds of positions, a mix of newly hired workers and transfers from other Boeing facilities. The International Association of Machinists (IAM) District 751, which represents approximately 30,000 Boeing production workers across the Puget Sound region, will cover North Line production workers under its collective bargaining agreement.

    Mayor Cassie Franklin highlighted Boeing’s “continued importance” to Everett at her April 2026 State of the City address, citing the company alongside clean-energy firms as pillars of the city’s advanced manufacturing future. With over 30,000 Boeing employees working across the Everett campus already, the North Line represents an expansion on top of an already enormous local economic anchor.

    For Snohomish County broadly, the North Line reinforces Everett’s position as the aerospace capital of the Pacific Northwest — a status that was tested by the 2024 strike, production problems, and ongoing FAA scrutiny, but never truly in doubt given the scale of Boeing’s physical infrastructure here.

    One Asterisk: The MAX 10

    The 737 MAX 10, Boeing’s longest and most fuel-efficient narrowbody, remains uncertified by the FAA as of April 2026 due to an unresolved engine de-icing system design issue. The North Line is capable of building MAX 10s, but commercial deliveries of that variant won’t begin until FAA certification is complete. Airlines — including Alaska Airlines, which has a significant presence at Paine Field — are waiting on MAX 10 deliveries. For now, the line will focus on the already-certified MAX 8 and MAX 9.

    Looking Ahead

    Boeing has been through a punishing few years — the 2024 strike, ongoing MAX certification disputes, leadership changes, and an FAA safety agreement that cap production rates. The North Line’s launch this summer is a concrete signal that the company is moving forward, and that Everett remains central to that future.

    For the workers, families, and businesses that orbit the Boeing campus in north Snohomish County, the North Line is more than a production expansion. It’s a visible sign that the world’s largest aerospace factory is adding capacity in a community that has tied its economic identity to that campus for more than 50 years.

    The line is expected to be operational by midsummer 2026. Boeing has not announced a formal opening date.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where is the Boeing 737 North Line located?

    The 737 North Line is located within Boeing’s Everett factory campus in Everett, Washington — on the Snohomish County campus that also houses final assembly for the 787 Dreamliner and 777X programs. This is the first time 737s have been assembled in Everett; the type has historically been built exclusively in Renton, WA.

    How many jobs will the North Line create in Everett?

    Boeing has not released a specific headcount for the North Line. The workforce is a combination of newly hired employees and existing staff transferring from Renton and Moses Lake operations. Industry observers estimate hundreds of direct positions, covered under the IAM District 751 collective bargaining agreement.

    When will the Boeing 737 North Line open?

    Boeing is targeting summer 2026 for the North Line’s opening, with midsummer the most cited estimate. The line will enter Low Rate Initial Production (LRIP) first, then scale up to full integration with Boeing’s overall 737 MAX flow.

    What models will the Everett North Line build?

    The North Line is capable of building all 737 MAX variants — the MAX 8, MAX 9, and MAX 10. Initial production will focus on the MAX 8 and MAX 9, which are FAA-certified. The MAX 10 remains uncertified due to engine de-icing system issues.

    Is the Everett North Line a union shop?

    Yes. North Line production workers are represented by IAM District 751, the International Association of Machinists union that covers approximately 30,000 Boeing production employees across the Puget Sound region under a collective bargaining agreement.

    How does the Everett 737 line differ from the Renton factory?

    The Renton factory is Boeing’s main 737 MAX production hub, where wings and fuselages are assembled from scratch. Everett’s North Line uses a 737 Wing Transport Tool to receive partially completed wings from Renton and complete final assembly in Everett — a cross-site workflow new to the 737 program. The Everett campus also simultaneously produces 787 Dreamliners and (in development) 777X jets.

    What does the North Line mean for Paine Field?

    Paine Field (Snohomish County Airport) is the flight delivery hub adjacent to the Everett factory. As North Line production ramps up, Paine Field will see increased activity in Boeing flight test and customer delivery operations for 737 MAX aircraft — adding to the widebody deliveries already occurring there.

  • Boeing’s North Line in Everett: What 737 MAX Production Means for the Region

    Boeing’s North Line in Everett: What 737 MAX Production Means for the Region

    Q: What is Boeing’s North Line in Everett?
    A: The North Line is Boeing’s fourth 737 MAX assembly line, being built inside the company’s massive Everett factory at Paine Field. It targets a midsummer 2026 launch date and will eventually produce 737s at rates above 47 aircraft per month — the first time 737 production has ever happened in Everett.

    Boeing’s North Line in Everett: What 737 MAX Production Means for the Whole Region

    Boeing’s Everett campus has always been a widebody town — 747s, 767s, 777s, and now the mammoth 777X. The narrowbody 737 has, for its entire 59-year history, been a Renton product. That changes this summer.

    The North Line — Boeing’s fourth 737 MAX assembly line — is taking shape inside the north end of the Everett factory, the world’s largest building by volume. It is targeting a midsummer 2026 launch date, and the people building it are chosen carefully, trained extensively, and aware that they are participating in something historically significant for this city.

    Why This Matters Beyond Boeing

    Boeing’s Paine Field operation is already Snohomish County’s largest private employer. The North Line is not just an internal manufacturing decision — it is an economic event for the entire region. Every production line position at Boeing creates an estimated 1.7 to 2.5 indirect jobs in the supply chain, in supporting businesses, and in the local service economy. Hundreds of new direct hires, plus the transfer of experienced workers from Renton to Everett, means new household incomes being spent in Snohomish County.

    Mayor Cassie Franklin has highlighted the North Line as a central piece of Everett’s economic momentum narrative, alongside the $120M downtown stadium project and the Port of Everett waterfront redevelopment. The city’s pitch to prospective residents and businesses increasingly rests on the idea that Everett is growing in multiple economic directions simultaneously — aerospace, defense, waterfront real estate, and sports/entertainment.

    What the North Line Will Build

    The line will assemble all three 737 MAX variants: the MAX 8, MAX 9, and MAX 10. It will begin in a low-rate initial production (LRIP) phase, prioritizing quality checks over throughput. Boeing’s stated goal is to eventually reach a combined 737 MAX production rate of 63 aircraft per month across all four lines — Everett’s North Line would be responsible for the production capacity above the existing three Renton lines’ ceiling of approximately 47 per month.

    Boeing is also introducing a new piece of equipment to the Everett operation: the 737 Wing Transport Tool, which manages the logistics of moving wing assemblies into position on the line. Infrastructure investment in the building itself — modifications to accommodate the 737’s different physical profile compared to widebody jets — has been underway since 2025.

    The Workforce Building the North Line

    New hires begin with 12 weeks of foundational training — much of it in Renton, working alongside experienced mechanics on active 737 production before transitioning to Everett. Among the first cohort: Jaden Myers and Alondra Ponce, who joined in late 2025. Veteran Boeing employee John V., with nearly 40 years at the company, is among those transitioning to support the North Line — his first time working on the 737 program after decades on widebody jets.

    Production leader Jennifer Boland-Masterson described the approach plainly: “We know how to do it… but we need to warm up our muscles. You don’t start with a marathon.” That philosophy — methodical ramp-up before volume — reflects the lessons Boeing has taken from its well-publicized quality control issues of 2023-2024.

    Recovery Context: Why This Line Matters for Boeing’s Credibility

    The North Line is not just about adding jets. It is about demonstrating that Boeing can stand up a new production line — with new people, new facilities, and new processes — while maintaining the quality standards that the FAA, airlines, and the public are watching closely. The 2024 IAM machinists’ strike lasted nearly seven weeks and further stressed Boeing’s production schedule. The North Line launch will be scrutinized as a data point in Boeing’s recovery narrative.

    For Everett, that scrutiny is an opportunity. If the North Line launches cleanly, it reinforces the case that Everett’s aerospace workforce is world-class — a message that supports workforce recruitment, community college aerospace programs at Everett Community College, and the city’s identity as a manufacturing hub distinct from Seattle’s tech-first image.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Boeing’s North Line

    Q: When does the Boeing North Line in Everett open?
    A: The target is midsummer 2026. Boeing has not announced a specific date, but preparations and early workforce training are on track as of April 2026.

    Q: How many jobs will the North Line create in Everett?
    A: Boeing has not released a precise number, but the line will add hundreds of direct production positions. Mayor Franklin and industry observers have noted the multiplier effect on indirect jobs throughout Snohomish County.

    Q: Will the North Line use union (IAM) labor?
    A: Yes. Boeing’s Everett production workforce is represented by IAM District 751, the same union that represents workers at the Renton plant. North Line workers are being hired and trained under the same labor agreement.

    Q: Is Boeing’s Everett campus the world’s largest building?
    A: Yes, by volume. The Everett factory complex — which houses the widebody programs and now the 737 North Line — is approximately 472 million cubic feet in volume, the largest building by volume in the world.

    Q: What is the ultimate production rate target for the 737 North Line?
    A: Boeing’s stated goal is a combined 737 MAX rate above 47 aircraft per month across all lines, with a longer-term target approaching 63 per month. The North Line’s specific share of that rate has not been publicly specified.

    Q: How does the North Line affect Paine Field airport operations?
    A: 737 MAX aircraft produced at Everett will depart from Paine Field (Snohomish County Airport) for delivery flights, the same as widebody aircraft. Additional production aircraft may increase delivery flight traffic at Paine Field.

    Related: Boeing’s North Line Is Coming to Everett: Inside the Workforce | Boeing 777X Production Flight Targeting April from Paine Field | Exploring Everett

  • Boeing North Line Everett: What the 737 MAX Line Means If You Work at Paine Field

    Boeing North Line Everett: What the 737 MAX Line Means If You Work at Paine Field

    Q: Should I apply to the Boeing North Line or transfer from Renton?
    A: The North Line is actively recruiting experienced mechanics from Renton for transfer, as well as new hires going through 12-week Renton-based training. Both paths land in the same IAM 751-represented positions. The opportunity to be part of a line launch — the first 737 production in Everett history — is real, and Boeing leadership is emphasizing quality over speed in the ramp-up.

    Boeing North Line Everett: What the 737 MAX Line Means If You Work at Paine Field

    If you are an aerospace worker at Boeing’s Everett campus, or a Renton mechanic watching the North Line take shape in the news, here is the ground-level picture of what this line launch actually means for your career, your workflow, and your daily life in Snohomish County.

    Who Is Working the North Line

    The North Line workforce is being assembled from three pools: new hires, experienced Renton transfers, and Everett campus veterans pivoting to 737 work. Each brings something different. New hires go through 12 weeks of training — much of it in Renton, working on live 737 production — before transitioning to Everett. That’s not a formality; Boeing wants North Line workers to have real muscle memory from high-volume 737 production before they ever touch an Everett airplane.

    Experienced Renton transfers bring exactly that muscle memory. The challenge for them is translating narrowbody habits and tooling into a widebody-configured facility that is being adapted for 737 work. The physical infrastructure of the north end of the Everett building is being modified — new tooling positions, new transport equipment including the 737 Wing Transport Tool — and workers transferring from Renton will be part of figuring out how the flow works in a new environment.

    Everett campus veterans, like the nearly 40-year mechanic identified only as John V. in Boeing’s public communications, bring institutional knowledge of the Everett building itself: its quirks, its logistical rhythms, and its culture. For many of them, this is their first 737 work after careers built on 747s, 767s, 777s, and now 777X.

    IAM District 751: What This Means for Union Members

    The North Line workforce is represented by IAM District 751 — the same union that represents workers at Renton. New hires and transfers alike work under the same collective bargaining agreement. The 2024 IAM strike, which lasted nearly seven weeks, is part of the context here: Boeing’s methodical, quality-first ramp-up strategy for the North Line is in part a response to the scrutiny that followed that labor action and the production disruptions of 2023-2024.

    Union workers at the North Line should expect a LRIP (low-rate initial production) phase that emphasizes checks and process verification over throughput targets. Production leader Jennifer Boland-Masterson has been explicit about this: “You don’t start with a marathon.” For mechanics accustomed to high-rate Renton production rhythms, the early North Line pace will feel deliberately measured.

    Commute: Renton vs. Everett

    For workers transferring from Renton, the commute change is significant. Renton’s plant sits at the southern end of Lake Washington; Everett’s campus is 30+ miles north. For a mechanic living in, say, Kenmore or Bothell, switching from Renton to Everett likely shortens a difficult reverse commute considerably. For someone in the Renton-Kent corridor, it adds distance.

    Paine Field sits at the northwest edge of Everett, with access from Highway 526 (the Mukilteo Speedway) and Evergreen Way. Parking at the campus is available, and the campus runs shift-change patterns that stagger with Paine Field’s commercial terminal traffic. Workers new to the Everett area should be aware that morning and evening congestion on Highway 526 between I-5 and the campus can run 20-30 minutes depending on time of day.

    Everett proper — downtown, Colby Avenue, the waterfront — is approximately a 10-15 minute drive from the factory campus. Workers relocating for the North Line will find housing options from Mukilteo (closer to Renton prices) to Marysville (most affordable) to downtown Everett (walkable, close to restaurant row).

    Career Trajectory on the North Line

    Getting in on a line launch is genuinely different from joining a mature production line. The early team has disproportionate influence on how work habits, quality rhythms, and team culture develop. Boeing’s track record suggests that North Line veterans — people who were there when the first Everett 737 rolled out — will be valuable institutional assets as the program scales. If Boeing reaches its target production rates above 47 aircraft per month, the North Line will need supervisors, coaches, and quality leads who know the line from the ground up.

    For Everett Community College aerospace program graduates, the North Line also represents a nearby on-ramp into 737 production work — historically only accessible by commuting to Renton — opening a path that didn’t exist before 2026.

    Frequently Asked Questions for Boeing Workers at Paine Field

    Q: Is Boeing still hiring for the North Line as of April 2026?
    A: Yes. Boeing has been hiring for mechanics and quality positions on the North Line, with a midsummer 2026 launch targeted. Check Boeing’s career site for open requisitions at the Everett facility.

    Q: What is the 12-week training for new North Line hires?
    A: New hires spend approximately 12 weeks in foundational training, much of it in Renton working on live 737 production alongside experienced mechanics, before transitioning to Everett for North Line operations.

    Q: Are North Line workers represented by IAM 751?
    A: Yes. All North Line production and quality positions at the Everett campus are represented by IAM District 751 under the same collective bargaining agreement as Renton workers.

    Q: What 737 variants will the North Line build?
    A: The MAX 8, MAX 9, and MAX 10. The line starts with low-rate initial production (LRIP) and will scale over time.

    Q: What is the production rate target for the North Line?
    A: Boeing’s combined 737 MAX target is a rate above 47 aircraft per month, eventually approaching 63 per month. The North Line provides the production capacity above what the existing three Renton lines can achieve.

    Related: Boeing’s North Line: What 737 MAX Production Means for the Whole Region | Boeing 777X Production Flight Targeting April | Exploring Everett

  • Boeing’s North Line in Everett: The Complete Worker’s Guide to the New 737 MAX Assembly Line

    Boeing’s North Line in Everett: The Complete Worker’s Guide to the New 737 MAX Assembly Line

    Q: Is Boeing building 737 MAX planes at the Everett factory?
    A: Yes, for the first time in the company’s history. Boeing’s North Line — a new fourth 737 MAX assembly line — is targeting a midsummer 2026 launch at the Everett factory. The line will produce 737-8, 737-9, and 737-10 variants, with a workforce drawn from newly hired Everett employees and experienced teammates transferred from Renton and Moses Lake.

    Boeing’s North Line in Everett: The Complete Worker’s Guide to the New 737 MAX Assembly Line

    For more than five decades, if you wanted to build a Boeing narrowbody aircraft, you went to Renton. That changes this summer. The North Line — Boeing’s fourth 737 MAX assembly line and the first ever to produce a narrowbody outside Renton — is taking shape inside the largest building by volume in the world, at the Boeing factory in Everett, Washington.

    For workers, this is what you need to know: what the line is, how hiring works, what training looks like, and what working on the North Line actually means for a career at Boeing in Everett.

    What the North Line Is and Why It Exists

    Boeing’s 737 MAX program is its most commercially important aircraft family. The company currently builds the MAX at three lines at its Renton, Washington facility, targeting a production rate above 47 aircraft per month. The North Line in Everett adds a fourth line with a longer-term goal of reaching 63 aircraft per month — a target Boeing program manager Katie Ringgold acknowledged will “take a number of years” to achieve at full ramp.

    The strategic logic for placing the fourth line in Everett is clear: the factory is already the largest industrial building in the world, home to Boeing’s 747, 767, 777, and 777X programs. Adding 737 production to that footprint uses existing infrastructure, maintains a large skilled workforce, and positions Everett as central to Boeing’s recovery strategy after several years of production challenges.

    Construction and tooling of the North Line are complete. A 737 Wing Transport Tool — a custom logistics system for ferrying partially completed wings between the Renton facility and Everett for final assembly — is in place. The line is ready. The current work is people.

    How Boeing Is Staffing the North Line

    The North Line workforce will come from two sources: newly hired Everett-based employees, and experienced teammates transferring from Renton, Everett’s existing widebody programs, and Moses Lake (where Boeing operates a paint and storage facility).

    The transfer model makes sense for a production launch: the North Line needs experienced hands who understand 737 MAX build processes deeply enough to train the new hires and set the quality culture for the line from its first day. As the line ramps and matures, the workforce will increasingly be built around Everett-based employees who develop their careers on the 737 for the first time in this city.

    Boeing is actively hiring and training mechanics and quality positions for the North Line. The hiring process runs through Boeing’s standard application pipeline at boeing.com/careers; positions are listed under the Everett, WA location filter.

    Training: What the Path to the North Line Looks Like

    New employees hired specifically for the North Line undergo a structured training pathway designed to ensure they’re ready before they touch the aircraft. The process:

    12 weeks of foundational training. New hires complete Boeing’s foundational manufacturing training program, building the core knowledge base required for precision aircraft assembly work.

    Structured on-the-job training (SOJT) at Renton. Following foundational training, new North Line employees spend time at the Renton 737 MAX production facility, pairing with experienced mentors in the actual build environment. This is where classroom knowledge meets production reality.

    Transition to Everett. Once training at Renton is complete, employees join the North Line in Everett.

    Jaden Myers, hired as a Flow Day 1 dorsal fin installer, was among the first employees to complete this process. His assessment of the experience was direct: “Opening a new production line is something special — we have to do it right.” Alondra Ponce, an electrician on the North Line, described the training environment as setting a strong foundation from day one.

    What the Work Looks Like

    The North Line builds the 737 MAX using the same production process established at Renton, adapted for the Everett facility. The build sequence follows the same station-based flow used across Boeing’s commercial programs: major sections are assembled, systems are installed, and the aircraft progresses through stations until it’s ready for delivery to customers.

    The 737 Wing Transport Tool is the distinctive element in Everett’s process — wings are assembled at one facility and transported to Everett for final integration, a logistics step that Renton’s integrated campus doesn’t require. That additional complexity is something North Line workers will need to understand as part of their workflow.

    FAA oversight of the line is expected to be intensive during the launch phase. Boeing’s consent decree with the FAA, following the production quality challenges of recent years, means the North Line will operate under heightened scrutiny. That’s not necessarily a negative for workers — it reflects a serious commitment to getting the quality culture right from the start, which is better for the program’s long-term health.

    Career Trajectory and the Everett Boeing Economy

    For workers building their careers in Everett, the North Line represents a meaningful expansion of opportunity. Previously, building narrowbody aircraft meant a career in Renton. Now, Everett workers can access both widebody programs (767, 777, 777X) and the 737 MAX — the world’s highest-production-rate commercial aircraft — without leaving their home city.

    The Everett Boeing campus employs tens of thousands of workers across its programs. The 777X, which is targeting its first production flight from Paine Field this spring before FAA certification, represents another major program in active development at the same facility. For machinists, electricians, quality inspectors, and manufacturing engineers, Everett’s Boeing footprint is becoming more diversified, not less.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Boeing’s North Line

    Q: When will the North Line begin producing 737 MAX aircraft in Everett?
    A: Boeing is targeting midsummer 2026 for the North Line’s launch. The line will not instantly reach production targets — it will ramp gradually as the workforce builds experience and the FAA validates processes under its heightened oversight framework.

    Q: Is Boeing hiring for the North Line right now?
    A: Yes. Boeing is actively hiring mechanics and quality positions for the North Line at Everett. Positions are listed at boeing.com/careers filtered by Everett, WA location.

    Q: What 737 MAX variants will the North Line build?
    A: The North Line will be capable of building all 737 MAX variants — the -8, -9, and -10 — though it will initially focus on those three variants before potentially expanding to others in the MAX family.

    Q: How long is the training process for new North Line employees?
    A: New hires complete approximately 12 weeks of foundational training, followed by structured on-the-job training (SOJT) at the Renton facility paired with experienced mentors, then transition to Everett for the North Line.

    Q: Will the North Line be represented by the IAM (International Association of Machinists)?
    A: Boeing’s Puget Sound production employees, including those at the Everett factory, work under existing IAM representation agreements. The North Line is part of the same Boeing Everett facility that is already covered by those agreements.

    Q: What is Boeing’s production rate target for the 737 MAX?
    A: Boeing is targeting production above 47 aircraft per month across all its 737 MAX lines in the near term, with a longer-term goal of reaching 63 aircraft per month. The North Line adds capacity toward those targets but won’t instantly lift overall output — it needs time to staff, train, and stabilize.

    Related: Boeing’s North Line Is Coming to Everett: Inside the Workforce Preparing to Build 737 MAXs | Boeing 777X Production Flight Targeting April from Paine Field | Portland Is Back: Alaska Airlines Restores Daily Nonstop Flights from Paine Field This June

  • Getting a Job on Boeing’s North Line in Everett: Training, Pay, and What to Expect

    Getting a Job on Boeing’s North Line in Everett: Training, Pay, and What to Expect

    Q: How do I get a job on Boeing’s North Line in Everett?
    A: Apply through boeing.com/careers filtered to Everett, WA. Boeing is actively hiring mechanics and quality positions for the North Line, which targets a midsummer 2026 launch. New hires complete 12 weeks of foundational training followed by structured on-the-job training (SOJT) at the Renton facility before transitioning to Everett.

    Getting a Job on Boeing’s North Line in Everett: Training, Pay, and What to Expect

    Boeing’s fourth 737 MAX assembly line is coming to Everett this summer — and it’s hiring. If you’re a machinist, electrician, quality inspector, or someone considering a manufacturing career in aerospace, here’s the practical information you need: what positions are open, how training works, what the transition from Renton looks like, and what working the North Line actually means day-to-day.

    What Positions Are Available

    Boeing is actively hiring for mechanics and quality positions on the North Line. The job families involved in 737 MAX production span a range of specializations that map to the build sequence:

    Production Mechanics — structural assembly, systems installation, and integration work across the line’s build stations. This includes positions like the Flow Day 1 dorsal fin installer role that Jaden Myers holds — early-station structural work that requires precision and an understanding of how the aircraft comes together downstream.

    Electrical and Systems Technicians — wiring, avionics, and electrical systems installation. Alondra Ponce’s electrician role on the North Line represents this category. Electrical work on a commercial narrowbody is complex and certification-critical.

    Quality Inspectors — Boeing’s heightened FAA oversight framework for the 737 MAX program means quality roles carry particular weight on the North Line. Inspectors work at every station to verify build quality before the aircraft progresses.

    Manufacturing Engineers and Process Specialists — supporting the line’s technical documentation, tooling, and production process development as the line ramps to full operation.

    All positions are listed at boeing.com/careers. Filter by Everett, WA location and the relevant job family. New listings for the North Line ramp are being posted as the launch approaches.

    The Training Path: What to Expect

    Boeing has built a structured onboarding process specifically for North Line hires that balances speed-to-production with quality rigor. Here’s how it works:

    Foundational Training (~12 weeks). New hires enter Boeing’s foundational manufacturing training program. This is classroom and hands-on instruction covering the core knowledge, tools, and processes required for precision aircraft assembly. For candidates without prior aerospace manufacturing experience, this is where you build the baseline.

    Structured On-the-Job Training (SOJT) at Renton. Following foundational training, North Line hires are paired with experienced mentors at the Renton 737 MAX production facility. You’re working in the actual production environment, learning the specific build sequence and quality standards for the aircraft you’ll be assembling in Everett. This is the most valuable part of the training process — you see a running production line before you work on a new one.

    Transition to Everett. Once SOJT is complete, you join the North Line. The Everett line uses the same build process as Renton, with one addition: a 737 Wing Transport Tool that ferries partially completed wings to Everett for final integration.

    Myers, who went through this process in late 2025, described the culture plainly: “Opening a new production line is something special — we have to do it right.” That’s the mindset Boeing is trying to build into the North Line from day one — a sense that the quality culture of this line is being established right now, by the first people who work on it.

    Transferring from Renton, Moses Lake, or Everett’s Widebody Programs

    If you’re already a Boeing employee at Renton, Moses Lake, or on Everett’s existing widebody programs (767, 777, 777X), the North Line represents a transfer opportunity, not just a new-hire opportunity. Boeing is staffing the line with experienced teammates precisely because it needs that expertise to stabilize the line and mentor new hires.

    Transfer opportunities are posted through Boeing’s internal job board. The advantage for experienced transferees: you come in without the foundational training requirement, your pay and seniority are preserved, and you’re part of building something new. The adjustment is real — Everett’s widebody work culture and the 737 MAX’s high-rate narrowbody culture are different environments — but experienced aerospace workers who understand build discipline adapt quickly.

    Commute and Location: The Practical Reality

    The North Line is at the Boeing Everett factory — the main gate is on Boeing Drive off Everett Avenue, with multiple entrance points across the campus. For workers commuting from South Snohomish County, King County, or Island County, Everett’s location on I-5 makes the commute viable from a wide geography.

    Everett Station is a multimodal hub served by Sound Transit and Community Transit. For workers who live south along the I-5 corridor, Sound Transit’s Sounder North service and ST Express buses serve the corridor. Everett’s housing market — with a median sale price around $547,000 and a range of rentals across neighborhoods like South Everett, Bayside, and Casino Road — is more affordable than Renton-adjacent options in King County.

    Boeing operates van pool programs and partners with regional transit agencies. Workers who want to avoid the I-5 commute have options — this is worth investigating through Boeing’s transportation resources before accepting a role.

    What the IAM Represents and What It Means for the North Line

    Production workers at Boeing’s Puget Sound facilities, including Everett, are represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM District 751). The North Line falls within the existing IAM representation framework — it is not a new bargaining unit or a non-represented work environment. The IAM’s contract covers wages, benefits, and working conditions for production and quality positions.

    After the IAM’s 2024 work stoppage and the subsequent contract negotiations, relations between the union and Boeing management are in a defined post-agreement phase. The North Line is launching into that environment, which matters for workplace culture. Workers considering the North Line should be aware of the current contract terms and the state of the labor relationship.

    Frequently Asked Questions for Boeing Job Seekers

    Q: Do I need prior aerospace experience to apply to the North Line?
    A: No. Boeing’s foundational training program is designed to bring qualified candidates with general manufacturing or mechanical skills into aircraft assembly work. Prior aerospace experience helps but is not required for entry-level production positions.

    Q: How long does it take from application to first day on the North Line?
    A: The process varies by position and hiring volume. The training path (foundational + SOJT) takes approximately 4-6 months total from hire date before you’re working independently on the North Line. Plan accordingly if you’re considering the timeline.

    Q: Are the North Line positions union-represented?
    A: Yes. Production and quality positions at Boeing Everett, including the North Line, are represented by IAM District 751 under existing collective bargaining agreements.

    Q: Can I transfer from Boeing’s widebody programs in Everett to the North Line?
    A: Transfer opportunities are posted through Boeing’s internal job board. Experienced teammates from existing Everett programs are among the core North Line workforce. Check internal postings and speak with your manager about transfer eligibility.

    Q: What’s the pay range for North Line production positions?
    A: Boeing positions are covered by the IAM District 751 contract, which establishes pay rates by classification. Specific current rates are available through the IAM District 751 website or Boeing’s HR resources. General aerospace production mechanic wages in Snohomish County range broadly based on classification and experience level.

    Related: Boeing’s North Line: Everett Prepares to Build Its First 737 MAX This Summer | Boeing 777X Production Flight Targeting April from Paine Field | Everett Housing Market April 2026: What Buyers and Sellers Need to Know Right Now

  • What Sound Transit’s Everett Light Rail Uncertainty Means for Paine Field Aerospace Workers

    What Sound Transit’s Everett Light Rail Uncertainty Means for Paine Field Aerospace Workers



    Q: Will light rail reach Paine Field for Boeing and aerospace workers?
    A: The Paine Field station (officially SW Everett Industrial Center station) is included in all known Sound Transit scenarios for the Everett Link Extension. The question is whether the full line continues to Everett Station, or stops at or near Paine Field — and when. The Sound Transit Board is expected to decide in summer 2026.

    What Sound Transit’s Everett Light Rail Uncertainty Means for Paine Field Aerospace Workers

    If you work on Boeing’s flight line at Paine Field, assemble components for the 777X program, or work at any of the 600-plus aerospace suppliers in Snohomish County’s industrial corridor, you have a direct stake in the Sound Transit cost crisis that dominated the April 14 town hall at Everett Station. Here’s what the $1.1 billion cost overrun problem means for you specifically.

    The Paine Field Station: Your Stop in the Extension

    The planned SW Everett Industrial Center station — commonly called the Paine Field station — sits at the southern end of the Everett Link Extension’s northern segment, closest to Boeing’s widebody assembly facilities and Paine Field International Airport. This is the stop designed to serve the 30,000-plus workers commuting daily to the Paine Field industrial corridor.

    What makes the Paine Field station different from the others in the extension is that it anchors the economics of the whole project. The concentrated, shift-based workforce at Boeing and the aerospace suppliers creates exactly the kind of predictable, high-density ridership that makes transit investments pencil out. That’s why the Paine Field station is believed to be preserved in all scenarios Sound Transit is weighing — even the ones that stop short of Everett Station downtown.

    The Scenario That Could Actually Help Boeing Workers First

    Here’s the scenario that could actually benefit aerospace workers even while leaving downtown Everett disconnected: Sound Transit builds the extension to Paine Field first, in a phased approach, without completing the final segment to Everett Station. Under this scenario, workers commuting from Seattle, Bellevue, Lynnwood, and south King County would gain a direct light rail connection to the Paine Field corridor by approximately 2037 — potentially years before a full Everett Station connection would be complete in a more ambitious scenario.

    That’s a real tradeoff. Workers who commute from the south would benefit. Everett residents who want to ride light rail downtown would not. The politics of that tradeoff are complicated — and it’s exactly what the April 14 town hall crowd was pressing Sound Transit about.

    What the Commute Currently Looks Like

    Right now, getting to Paine Field from Seattle on transit means Link light rail to Lynnwood City Center station (opened 2024), followed by Community Transit Route 201 or 202 into the Paine Field corridor. The trip takes approximately 75-90 minutes from downtown Seattle. By car on I-5, the same trip takes 35-45 minutes in off-peak traffic — and significantly longer during Boeing’s shift changes, when northbound I-5 and SR 526 congest heavily.

    Direct light rail to Paine Field — with trains running every 8-12 minutes — would compress that commute to roughly 50-55 minutes from downtown Seattle, with no traffic variability and no car costs. For workers doing daily reverse commutes from Seattle, that’s a meaningful quality of life change. For workers already living in Everett or Marysville, it adds a transit option for commuting south to Seattle.

    The 2037 Target — And What Could Push It Later

    Sound Transit’s current projection puts the first phase of the Everett extension — reaching as far north as Paine Field — as early as 2037. That’s 11 years away. For Boeing workers early in their careers, that’s a plausible planning horizon. For workers counting on transit options in the near term, it’s not.

    What could push the 2037 target later: the Sound Transit Board choosing a more conservative phasing approach that delays construction start, federal funding gaps, continued inflation in construction costs, or permitting and right-of-way challenges in the SR 526 corridor. Sound Transit has already slipped this project’s timeline from 2036 to 2037-2041. That history suggests treating optimistic targets with skepticism.

    How to Influence the Summer 2026 Decision

    The Sound Transit Board will vote on ST3 System Plan restructuring in summer 2026. The voices of Paine Field workers — as both transit users and significant economic stakeholders — matter in this process. Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives represent your interests.

    Ways to engage before the vote: Submit comments at soundtransit.org, contact Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’s office at (425) 388-3460, or reach out to the Economic Alliance Snohomish County, which has been advocating loudly for the full Paine Field and Everett Station connection.

    For the complete picture on the Everett extension, see our full knowledge hub: Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide. For more on Everett’s aerospace economy, read about the 600+ aerospace companies in Snohomish County and Boeing’s North Line worker guide.

    FAQ: Light Rail and Paine Field for Boeing Workers

    Will the Paine Field station be built regardless of what happens to Everett Station?

    Based on publicly available Sound Transit scenario documents, the Paine Field station is included in all known options. The key question is whether the line extends further to Everett Station, not whether Paine Field gets served. No final decision has been made.

    When would a Paine Field light rail station open?

    Sound Transit targets the first phase reaching Paine Field as early as 2037, pending the Board’s summer 2026 decisions on ST3 System Plan restructuring.

    How long would the light rail commute from Seattle to Paine Field be?

    With a direct Link connection from downtown Seattle to the Paine Field station, travel time is estimated at approximately 50-55 minutes — compared to 75-90 minutes on current bus-rail connections and 35-60 minutes by car depending on traffic.

    What does the Paine Field light rail station cover?

    The SW Everett Industrial Center station is planned to serve Boeing’s widebody assembly facilities, Paine Field International Airport (PAE), and the Paine Field industrial corridor — home to Boeing and 600+ aerospace suppliers.

    How can Boeing workers comment on Sound Transit’s decision?

    Submit comments at soundtransit.org, attend Sound Transit Board meetings with public comment periods, or contact Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’s office. The Board votes on the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026.

  • Boeing’s 777X Production First Flight at Paine Field: The Complete Everett Guide

    Boeing’s 777X Production First Flight at Paine Field: The Complete Everett Guide



    Q: Has Boeing’s 777X flown as a production-standard aircraft?
    A: Boeing’s first production-standard 777X completed fuel testing at Paine Field in Everett and is targeted for its first production-configured flight in April 2026. This is distinct from earlier test flights — it is the first 777X built exactly as airlines will receive it, with no experimental test equipment. A successful flight would be the clearest milestone yet that the long-delayed program is approaching FAA certification.

    Boeing’s 777X Production First Flight at Paine Field: The Complete Everett Guide

    The Boeing 777X has been one of the longest, most expensive, and most closely watched commercial aircraft programs in aviation history. Seven years of delays. More than $15 billion in development charges. An original 2020 certification target that has slipped to a projected 2026-2027 timeframe. And through all of it, the program has remained anchored at Paine Field in Everett — where Boeing’s widebody factory sits on the west side of Snohomish County Airport, and where every 777X ever built has rolled off the production line.

    In April 2026, the program has reached a milestone that matters more than any single test flight that came before it: Boeing’s first production-standard 777X has completed fuel testing at Paine Field and is ready to fly.

    What “Production-Standard” Means — And Why It Changes Everything

    Every 777X built before this one was a test aircraft. Test aircraft are loaded with experimental instrumentation, temporary sensors, and monitoring equipment that would never appear in a commercial jet. They fly specially modified profiles. Engineers learn from them, but they don’t represent what airlines will actually operate.

    A production-standard aircraft is built exactly the way the aircraft that Lufthansa — the 777X’s launch customer — will actually put into service. Same systems architecture. Same cabin configuration. Same software loads. Same maintenance procedures. No experimental modifications. No special monitoring equipment. It’s the aircraft that airlines signed contracts for.

    Why does the FAA require a production-standard aircraft for certification? Because regulators need to verify that the design performs reliably without the training wheels of specialized test equipment. The FAA’s Type Inspection Authorization (TIA) for production-configured aircraft — expected in the second half of 2026 if the April first flight succeeds — would allow FAA pilots to join the cockpit for the final certification evaluation flights. That’s the last major hurdle before an airworthiness certificate.

    The 777X Program at a Glance

    The 777X is Boeing’s newest-generation widebody, featuring 12-foot carbon-fiber composite folding wingtips, GE9X high-bypass turbofan engines producing up to 105,000 pounds of thrust, and a fuselage that’s wider than the 777-300ER it eventually replaces. The aircraft is designed for routes of 7,285 nautical miles (the 777-9 variant) and 8,730 nautical miles (the 777-8), making it competitive on long ultra-haul routes.

    The program has accumulated more than $15 billion in development charges since it launched in 2013 — one of the most expensive commercial aircraft development programs in aviation history. Launch orders came from Lufthansa, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines, and others. Total orders and commitments across 777X variants exceed 490 aircraft as of early 2026.

    The original delivery target was 2020. It slipped to 2021, then 2022, then 2023, then 2024-2025, and is now projected for first delivery to Lufthansa in Q1 2027 — if the production-standard flight succeeds and FAA certification proceeds as planned in 2026.

    The Paine Field Connection — What This Means for Everett

    The 777X program is physically inseparable from Everett. Boeing builds every 777X in the Everett factory — the 472 million cubic foot Everett Delivery Center on the west side of Paine Field, which at 98.7 acres under roof remains the largest building by volume on earth. The 777X production line operates alongside the 767 freighter program and, following the 737 MAX North Line expansion, the first 737 MAX aircraft to be assembled at Paine Field.

    For Everett’s Boeing workforce — approximately 30,000 direct Boeing employees in Snohomish County — the 777X’s path to certification is a production ramp question. Successful FAA certification means Lufthansa takes delivery of the first aircraft, followed by Qatar Airways and Emirates. Each delivery triggers production slot payments. A robust delivery ramp translates directly into stable employment on Paine Field’s widebody lines.

    For the 600-plus aerospace suppliers in Snohomish County who build components, systems, and parts for 777X production, the certification timeline is equally consequential. Suppliers like Spirit AeroSystems and dozens of local precision machining, composites, and avionics companies have supplier agreements tied to production rates that kick in with deliveries.

    What Comes After the First Production Flight

    If the April 2026 production-standard first flight is successful, the path to certification proceeds in roughly these steps: Boeing submits evidence of production-standard conformance to the FAA; the FAA issues a Type Inspection Authorization for production-configured aircraft; FAA pilots join test flights for final conformance evaluations; Boeing completes the remaining certification test points; FAA issues the 777X Type Certificate (TC); Boeing delivers the first aircraft to Lufthansa, targeted for Q1 2027.

    Each step has its own risks. The FAA’s post-737 MAX scrutiny of Boeing certification programs has added time to this process compared to pre-2019 standards. But the successful fuel test completion and production-standard configuration represent genuine progress after years of program challenges.

    Watching the 777X at Paine Field

    Paine Field is one of the few places in the world where the public can watch a next-generation widebody aircraft fly. The Boeing Future of Flight Aviation Center, located just north of the Paine Field flight line at 8415 Paine Field Blvd., offers factory tours and a rooftop observation deck. When the 777X makes its production-standard first flight, it will take off from Paine Field’s Runway 16R/34L and likely perform initial maneuvers over Snohomish County before landing back at Paine.

    Boeing has not announced a public viewing date or time for the flight. Aviation enthusiast groups and planespotting communities on the Puget Sound Aviation Facebook group and FlightAware typically track Boeing test flights in real time once they appear on radar.

    For more on Everett’s aerospace economy, see our coverage of the original 777X first flight story, the 600+ aerospace companies in Snohomish County, and Boeing’s North Line worker guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions: Boeing 777X at Paine Field

    What is the Boeing 777X?

    The Boeing 777X is Boeing’s newest-generation widebody commercial aircraft, featuring carbon-fiber composite folding wingtips, GE9X engines, and significantly improved fuel efficiency versus the 777-300ER. The program has launch orders from Lufthansa, Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Singapore Airlines.

    Where is the Boeing 777X built?

    Every Boeing 777X is built at Boeing’s Everett factory at Paine Field — the 98.7-acre building that remains the largest building by volume on earth.

    Why did it take so long for a production-standard 777X to fly?

    The 777X program experienced delays from regulatory scrutiny following the 737 MAX crises, pandemic disruptions to widebody demand, structural design challenges, and software certification requirements. Total development charges have exceeded $15 billion across the program’s history.

    When will Boeing deliver the first 777X to an airline?

    If the April 2026 production-standard first flight succeeds and FAA certification proceeds as planned, Lufthansa is targeted to receive the first 777X in Q1 2027.

    How many 777X orders does Boeing have?

    Boeing has accumulated orders and commitments exceeding 490 aircraft across 777-8 and 777-9 variants as of early 2026. Key customers include Lufthansa, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines, and Cathay Pacific.

    Can I watch the 777X fly at Paine Field?

    Boeing has not announced public viewing arrangements for the production-standard first flight. The Boeing Future of Flight Aviation Center offers tours and an observation deck. Aviation enthusiast communities on social media typically track Boeing test flights in real time via FlightAware and ADS-B Exchange.

    What does 777X certification mean for Everett jobs?

    FAA certification enables Boeing to deliver aircraft to customers, triggering production ramp-ups that directly support Everett’s approximately 30,000 Boeing employees in Snohomish County and the 600+ local aerospace suppliers whose contracts scale with production rates.

  • Boeing 777X Production Flight at Paine Field: What Everett Aerospace Workers Need to Know

    Boeing 777X Production Flight at Paine Field: What Everett Aerospace Workers Need to Know



    Q: What does the 777X production-standard first flight mean for Boeing jobs at Paine Field?
    A: It’s the clearest signal yet that the long-delayed 777X program is approaching FAA certification and commercial deliveries — which means production ramps. If certification proceeds as planned in 2026 and deliveries start in Q1 2027, Boeing would begin increasing 777X production rates at Paine Field, potentially adding roles across the flight line, avionics, final assembly, and delivery center functions.

    Boeing 777X Production Flight at Paine Field: What Everett Aerospace Workers Need to Know

    For the thousands of Boeing employees and aerospace suppliers who work at or near Paine Field, the April 2026 production-standard 777X first flight is more than an aviation milestone. It’s the beginning of the delivery clock. Here’s what it means for the workforce.

    The Delivery Ramp: Why Certification Drives Hiring

    Boeing builds 777X aircraft at a low production rate while they’re in certification — essentially “parking” finished or nearly-finished jets that can’t be legally delivered until the FAA issues the Type Certificate. The Everett Delivery Center currently has multiple 777X airframes in various states of completion awaiting certification.

    When the FAA issues the 777X Type Certificate — targeted for later in 2026 if the production-standard first flight succeeds — Boeing can begin deliveries to Lufthansa, Qatar Airways, Emirates, and other customers. Each delivery clears a backlog aircraft and adds to the production cadence. The ramp-up in production rate is what drives employment growth on the 777X program.

    Boeing’s typical widebody production ramp pattern: initial deliveries begin at a low monthly rate (2-3 per month), growing to 4, then 5, then eventually targeting higher rates as demand validates the ramp. The 777-300ER program peaked at approximately 8.3 aircraft per month before the transition to 777X. Even at 5 per month, 777X would represent a significant employment driver at Paine Field.

    Where the Jobs Are in 777X Production

    The 777X program at Paine Field spans multiple work centers. If you’re in the aerospace workforce or considering entering it, the 777X ramp creates demand in several specific areas:

    Structure and assembly (Flight line): Fuselage section joining, wing installation, systems installation (hydraulics, electrical, pneumatics), interior installation. These are the highest-headcount areas in 777X production.

    Avionics and systems testing: The 777X’s fly-by-wire control systems, advanced cockpit displays, and integrated aircraft network are more complex than the 777-300ER. Testing roles grow as production rates increase.

    Composite wing manufacturing: The 777X’s carbon-fiber composite wings are manufactured in Boeing’s 1.3 million square foot Composite Wing Center at Paine Field — a dedicated facility that houses the largest autoclave ovens in commercial aviation production. Composite manufacturing and machining roles are growth areas.

    Final delivery and customer flight operations: Boeing’s Customer Delivery Center at Paine Field processes aircraft for delivery. Customer airlines send their own crews for familiarization and acceptance flights. This function scales with delivery rates.

    What IAM District 751 Should Watch For

    The International Association of Machinists (IAM) District 751 represents the majority of Boeing’s hourly production workforce at Paine Field. The 777X ramp will be negotiated through the existing collective bargaining framework — production rate increases and new hire decisions are governed by Boeing’s workforce planning and the IAM-negotiated terms.

    Key items IAM members and prospective workers should track: Boeing’s stated production rate targets for 777X (communicated on quarterly earnings calls), headcount announcements from Boeing Commercial Airplanes, and the scope of work agreements covering which systems and components are built in-house versus by suppliers at Paine Field.

    Supplier Jobs in Everett’s Aerospace Ecosystem

    The 777X production ramp ripples through Snohomish County’s 600-plus aerospace suppliers. Companies like Exotic Metals Forming (Kent, with Snohomish County presence), Precision Castparts, Applied Composites, and dozens of smaller precision machining, avionics, and fabrication shops have contractual relationships tied to Boeing’s 777X production rates.

    Supplier ramp-up typically lags Boeing’s own ramp by 3-6 months, as tier-1 and tier-2 suppliers respond to purchase order increases. Workers with aerospace precision machining, composites manufacturing, or quality assurance certifications should monitor Boeing’s Tier 1 supplier network for openings — many are posted at supplier company websites and on Snohomish County’s economic development job boards before appearing on major job aggregators.

    Boeing Career Resources at Paine Field

    If you’re looking to enter or advance in Boeing’s Paine Field workforce, current pathways include: Boeing’s direct application portal at boeing.com/careers (filter for “Everett, WA” locations); Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) programs offering earn-while-you-learn paths into manufacturing roles; Everett Community College’s Engineering and Industrial Technology programs; and Workforce Snohomish’s job board at workforcesnohomish.org.

    For the full 777X program context, read our complete 777X guide and our coverage of Snohomish County’s 600+ aerospace suppliers. Boeing North Line workers can also find relevant career context in our North Line worker guide.

    FAQ: 777X Production and Everett Aerospace Jobs

    When will Boeing start delivering 777X aircraft?

    If the April 2026 production-standard first flight succeeds and FAA certification proceeds as planned in 2026, Boeing targets first delivery to Lufthansa in Q1 2027.

    How many 777X workers are at Paine Field?

    Boeing hasn’t disclosed 777X-specific headcount. The total Boeing workforce in Snohomish County numbers approximately 30,000 employees, with a significant portion tied to widebody programs including 777X, 767, and the expanding 737 North Line.

    Is the 777X program hiring at Paine Field now?

    Boeing typically posts roles tied to production ramp-up 6-12 months before the production rate increase. Monitoring boeing.com/careers for Everett locations and watching for Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) announcements are the best real-time indicators of hiring cycles.

    What skills are most in demand for 777X production?

    High-demand skills include composites manufacturing, systems installation (hydraulics, avionics, electrical), precision machining, quality assurance inspection, and flight test engineering. Certifications from AJAC, Everett Community College’s technical programs, or prior military aviation maintenance provide strong entry credentials.

    Where is Boeing’s 777X Composite Wing Center?

    Boeing’s 777X Composite Wing Center is located at Paine Field in Everett, within Boeing’s broader campus. It houses dedicated autoclave systems for curing the 777X’s 235-foot wingspan carbon-fiber composite wings — the largest composite commercial aircraft wings ever built.

  • Beyond Boeing: How 600 Snohomish County Companies Keep the World’s Aerospace Industry Flying

    Beyond Boeing: How 600 Snohomish County Companies Keep the World’s Aerospace Industry Flying

    Q: How many aerospace companies are in Snohomish County?
    A: More than 600 aerospace companies operate in Snohomish County, making it one of the most concentrated aerospace supply chain ecosystems in the United States. These companies collectively account for 46% of all aerospace workers in Washington state and support a regional economic ecosystem worth approximately $60 billion annually.

    Beyond Boeing: How 600 Snohomish County Companies Keep the World’s Aerospace Industry Flying

    When you think about aerospace in Snohomish County, Boeing dominates the mental map. The Everett factory is the world’s largest building. Paine Field generates approximately $60 billion in annual economic impact for the Washington economy and supports roughly 158,000 jobs. Boeing’s name is on road signs, community partnerships, and the economic identity of this region going back generations.

    But Boeing doesn’t build a single airplane on its own.

    Behind every 737 that rolls off the line in Renton, every 777X taking shape in Everett, and every 767 tanker heading to the Air Force, there’s a web of suppliers, manufacturers, precision parts makers, electronics companies, materials providers, and service firms that make it possible. And a remarkable share of them are right here in Snohomish County.

    More than 600 aerospace companies call Snohomish County home. Together, they represent 46% of all aerospace workers in Washington state — a concentration of specialized talent and manufacturing capability that took decades to build and would be nearly impossible to replicate anywhere else.

    Who Are Snohomish County’s Aerospace Suppliers?

    The aerospace supply chain in Snohomish County isn’t one kind of company. It’s hundreds of different kinds, each contributing something specific to the finished aircraft.

    There are structural component manufacturers making fuselage sections, brackets, frames, and fasteners. There are electronics companies — including aerospace electronics firms that have relocated to Paine Field specifically to be close to Boeing operations — producing the systems that control everything from cabin lighting to flight management. There are composite materials specialists working with the same carbon fiber technology that defines the 787 Dreamliner. There are precision machining shops holding tolerances measured in thousandths of an inch. There are surface treatment and coating operations. There are tooling and fixtures manufacturers. There are maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) shops.

    Many of these aren’t Boeing subsidiaries — they’re independent businesses, some family-owned, some employee-owned, serving not just Boeing but Airbus, Bombardier, Comac, Embraer, and other aerospace manufacturers worldwide.

    Why Snohomish County? The Geography of Aerospace Concentration

    Industrial clustering is a well-documented economic phenomenon: when enough companies in the same industry locate in the same place, everyone benefits. Talent pools deepen. Specialized suppliers emerge. Universities and community colleges build programs that feed the industry. Infrastructure gets built to serve it.

    Snohomish County’s aerospace cluster follows exactly this pattern. Boeing chose Everett for its first widebody assembly facility in 1967 because of available land and proximity to its existing Renton and Seattle operations. Over the following decades, the suppliers followed. By the time the 747, 767, 777, and eventually the 787 were in full production, hundreds of companies had established operations near the factory — close enough to respond quickly to Boeing’s needs but independent enough to serve other customers.

    Today, the Port of Everett — just a few miles from Paine Field — functions as an integral link in Boeing’s supply chain, handling the movement of large aircraft components and materials that can’t travel by truck or rail. The port’s industrial waterfront provides the kind of heavy-lift logistics capability that aerospace manufacturing requires.

    The Washington Aerospace Training and Research (WATR) Center at Edmonds College provides technical training for workers serving both Boeing and the broader supplier community. The center recently hosted Boeing’s community leaders meeting focused on workforce development pathways — a signal of how deeply the company and the supply chain are invested in maintaining the region’s talent pipeline.

    The Multiplier Effect: What Boeing’s Hiring Wave Means for Suppliers

    When Boeing announced it was hiring approximately 800 people per month in the Puget Sound region — and opening the North Line in Everett as a new 737 MAX assembly facility — the impact wasn’t limited to Boeing’s own workforce.

    Every Boeing mechanic who joins the North Line needs tooling, consumables, and training equipment. Every new 737 built in Everett requires parts from dozens of suppliers. The ripple effect of Boeing’s hiring wave and production ramp moves through the supply chain in predictable ways: supplier firms increase their own hiring, their purchasing expands, their shipping volumes grow.

    Economic Alliance Snohomish County tracks aerospace as one of the region’s primary target industries precisely because of this multiplier effect. When Boeing is healthy and expanding, the 600-plus supplier companies in the county tend to grow with it.

    The current trajectory — 737 North Line opening this summer, 777X production-standard testing underway at Paine Field, 777 and 767 programs continuing — represents a meaningful positive signal for the supply chain after the difficult years of strikes, the 737 MAX production freeze, and post-pandemic production disruptions.

    Diversification: The Smartest Thing Snohomish County’s Suppliers Ever Did

    Here’s something that doesn’t get said enough in Boeing coverage: Snohomish County’s aerospace economy is bigger than Boeing.

    Yes, Boeing is the anchor. Boeing is the reason the cluster exists, the reason Paine Field has the infrastructure it has, the reason Edmonds College built the WATR Center. But the 600-plus companies in the supply chain have built their own capabilities, their own customer relationships, their own expertise.

    Some of those companies supply Airbus components. Some supply business jet manufacturers. Some supply defense contractors who have nothing to do with Boeing. The precision machining, composite fabrication, avionics integration, and quality systems expertise that built up around Boeing turns out to be valuable to many customers.

    That diversification is resilience. During the 737 MAX grounding and the pandemic production collapse, companies with diversified customer bases survived while purely Boeing-dependent suppliers struggled. The lesson was learned: the healthiest part of Snohomish County’s aerospace supply chain can serve multiple masters.

    What North Line Activation Means for the Supply Chain

    The 737 North Line’s summer 2026 activation carries specific implications for suppliers that haven’t gotten enough attention: it means a new assembly line, which means new tooling requirements, new supply volumes, and new opportunities for established suppliers to expand their Boeing relationships.

    Boeing’s approach to the North Line is to replicate the Renton production process — same build sequence, same quality standards, same supplier network. That’s intentional: it reduces complexity, protects quality, and lets existing suppliers serve both lines. But it also means significantly more volume flowing through existing supply relationships.

    For Snohomish County suppliers who serve the 737 program, the North Line means more business — longer production runs, more stable order forecasts, and potentially the ability to justify capital investments in additional manufacturing capacity.

    A Workforce Built Over Generations

    One aspect of Snohomish County’s aerospace supply chain that doesn’t appear in economic impact reports: the human depth.

    The 600-plus companies in the county employ people who grew up here, went to school here, and built careers in aerospace here. Many are second-generation aerospace workers — their parents worked at Boeing or a supplier, they followed. Some are third-generation.

    That accumulated expertise doesn’t get built in a few years. The precision machinist who’s been holding Boeing tolerances for 25 years carries knowledge that isn’t in any textbook. The composite layup technician who’s worked on seven different aircraft programs understands failure modes that only come from experience. The quality systems engineer who’s navigated a dozen FAA audits knows how to thread the needle between production pressure and regulatory compliance.

    This is what $60 billion in annual economic impact really represents. It’s hundreds of thousands of people who built their lives around aerospace — and who are watching Boeing’s North Line activation, the 777X’s first production flight, and the incoming production ramp with more than casual interest. Their livelihoods are connected to those jets. Their mortgages. Their kids’ schools. Their neighborhood restaurants. Their whole economy.

    That’s the supply chain story in Snohomish County. It’s not just an economic cluster. It’s a community built on precision, patience, and the ability to build things that fly.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How many aerospace companies are in Snohomish County?

    More than 600 aerospace companies operate in Snohomish County, according to the Economic Alliance Snohomish County. This makes it one of the most concentrated aerospace supply chain ecosystems in the United States.

    What percentage of Washington’s aerospace workers are in Snohomish County?

    Approximately 46% of all aerospace workers in Washington state are employed in Snohomish County, according to data from the Economic Alliance Snohomish County.

    What is the economic impact of aerospace in Snohomish County?

    The Paine Field and Boeing Everett complex generates approximately $60 billion in annual economic impact for the Washington economy and supports approximately 158,000 jobs.

    Do Snohomish County aerospace suppliers only serve Boeing?

    No. While Boeing is the anchor customer, many suppliers also serve Airbus, Bombardier, Comac, Embraer, and defense contractors. This diversification provides resilience during Boeing production cycles.

    What is the WATR Center?

    The Washington Aerospace Training and Research (WATR) Center at Edmonds College provides technical training for aerospace manufacturing workers serving both Boeing and the regional supplier community.

    How does Boeing’s North Line affect the supply chain?

    The North Line’s summer 2026 activation is expected to increase order volumes for 737 program suppliers, enabling them to invest in additional capacity and hire more workers to serve the expanded production rate.