Air India has announced the resignation of its Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Campbell Wilson, marking a key leadership transition as the airline advances into the next stage of its multi-year restructuring programme under Tata Sons ownership.
Wilson had previously informed Air India Chairman N. Chandrasekaran in 2024 of his intention to step down in 2026. The airline confirmed that he will continue in his role until a successor is appointed and formally takes over, ensuring continuity during the transition period. A board-appointed committee has been formed to oversee the selection process.
Wilson’s departure comes after a four-year tenure that has coincided with one of the most significant transformation phases in the airline’s modern history, following its privatisation and return to the Tata Group in 2022.
Reflecting on his tenure, Wilson highlighted the scale and complexity of the restructuring undertaken since privatisation. He noted that the period has included the integration of four airlines into a unified group structure, the transition from public to private sector operating practices, and a comprehensive overhaul of leadership, workforce structure, organisational culture, and operational processes.
He also pointed to significant fleet and product developments, including the addition of approximately 100 aircraft, the near-completion of a full retrofit programme for legacy narrowbody aircraft, and the introduction of newly delivered widebody aircraft featuring customised cabin interiors. These upgrades have been part of a broader effort to elevate both ground and inflight service standards across the network.
A major component of the transformation strategy has been investment in aviation infrastructure and training capabilities. Wilson highlighted the establishment of South Asia’s largest training academy, two flight simulator facilities, a dedicated flying school, and a greenfield maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) base. These assets are intended to support the airline’s expanding fleet and long-term operational ambitions.
He also noted that with the foundational phase largely complete and a period of relative stability ahead of major fleet inductions from an orderbook of nearly 600 aircraft beginning in 2027, the timing is appropriate for leadership transition to the next phase of growth.
In his statement, Wilson described his tenure as a defining period in the airline’s modern history and expressed continued support for the organisation and its workforce as it moves forward on its transformation journey.
Air India Chairman N. Chandrasekaran, speaking on behalf of the board, acknowledged Wilson’s contribution to the airline’s restructuring. He highlighted the complexity of challenges faced during the period, including post-pandemic supply chain disruptions that affected aircraft deliveries and retrofit schedules, as well as broader geopolitical and operational headwinds impacting global aviation.
Chandrasekaran noted that despite these challenges, the leadership team succeeded in aligning a diverse workforce behind a unified transformation agenda, laying the groundwork for what he described as an emerging new Air India.
The Air India Board has constituted a search committee to identify and appoint a successor in the coming months, as the carrier prepares for its next phase of expansion and fleet induction.







