Creation of IAG as BA/Iberia holding company British Airways and Iberia signed a preliminary merger agreement in November 2009. In April 2010, they signed a full merger agreement, with an intended completion date of late 2010, subject to securing the necessary regulatory approvals. The merger between British Airways and Iberia was completed on 21 January 2011, and shares in the new holding company IAG began trading in London and Madrid on 24 January. On 6 October 2011, IAG created
Iberia Express, a new low-cost airline to operate short- and medium-haul routes from IAG's Madrid hub and provide transfer feed onto Iberia's longhaul network. Iberia Express began operations on 25 March 2012.
Purchase of BMI (2011) On 4 November 2011, IAG agreed in principle to acquire
British Midland International (BMI) from
Lufthansa, in a deal which would increase IAG's share of slots at Heathrow airport from 45% to 54%. On 22 December 2011, IAG agreed a binding deal with Lufthansa to acquire BMI for £172.5 million. On 30 March 2012, the purchase was approved, subject to the condition that the combined group divest itself of 12 daily slots and lease two daily slots at Heathrow airport. The acquisition was completed on 20 April 2012, and the BMI fleet and routes were integrated into the British Airways schedule throughout 2012.
Slaughter and May advised IAG on the BMI acquisition.
Purchase of Vueling, and creation of IAG Cargo (2012) Airbus A320-200 On 8 November 2012, IAG made a cash tender offer to buy
Vueling, a Spanish low-cost airline based in Barcelona. The offer was €7 per ordinary share of Vueling, with the total cost of acquisition anticipated to be €113m. It was funded from internal IAG resources. The reported total assets of Vueling were €805m and in the nine months to 30 September 2012 it had generated profits before tax of €59m. An increased offer of €9.25 was accepted by the Vueling board on 9 April 2013, and received majority shareholder approval on 23 April 2013. IAG took control of Vueling on 26 April 2013. In December 2012, IAG completed the merger of the cargo operations of British Airways, BMI and Iberia into a single business unit,
IAG Cargo.
Purchase of Aer Lingus (2015) Airbus A330-200 In January 2015, IAG made a bid of €1.36 billion for
Aer Lingus. This was expected to be accepted after the rejection of two prior bids. In May 2015, the Irish government agreed to sell its stake in Aer Lingus to IAG, as did the Aer Lingus board in late January 2015. The takeover became irreversible on 18 August 2015.
Creation of LEVEL brand Airbus A330-200 In March 2017, it was announced that a new low cost longhaul airline named
LEVEL was to start operating from
Barcelona in June 2017. On 29 December 2017, it was announced that IAG bought major parts of defunct Austrian leisure airline
Niki including 15
Airbus A321 aircraft and traffic rights in
Düsseldorf,
Munich,
Vienna,
Zürich and
Palma de Mallorca.
Aborted Norwegian takeover, and group fleet orders In April 2018, it was reported that IAG was considering a takeover of
Norwegian, a low-budget competitor to the group, however, by early 2019, IAG had fully disposed of its stake in Norwegian. At the 2019
Paris Air Show, IAG signed a letter of intent to purchase 200
Boeing 737 MAX aircraft consisting of the 737 MAX 8 and 737 MAX 10 variants to be allocated to the group's various airlines even though at the time of the signing the 737 MAX
was still grounded worldwide following the two fatal crashes likely caused by the design of the MCAS system. Aviation analysts have questioned IAG's leadership in making such an order when the 737 MAX design is still being rectified. IAG CEO
Willie Walsh shrugged off the plane's uncertain future. "We're partnering with the Boeing brand", he said. "That's the brand that I'm doing business with. That's the brand that I’ve worked with for years. And it's a brand that I trust". Also at the 2019 Paris Air Show, IAG agreed to purchase 14
Airbus A321XLR aircraft, 8 for delivery to
Iberia and 6 to
Aer Lingus, with options for a further 14 of the aircraft. On 19 May 2022, IAG finalised the purchase of 50 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft consisting of the 737 MAX 200 and 737 MAX 10 variants with 100 options to be allocated to the group's various airlines, which was originally announced at the 2019 Paris Air Show. On 9 May 2025, IAG ordered up to 76 aircraft from Airbus and Boeing, out of which 32 firm orders and 10 options for the
Boeing 787-10 will be allocated to
British Airways, and 21 firm orders and 13 options for the
Airbus A330-900 will be allocated to Aer Lingus, Iberia and
LEVEL. It also revealed the firming of options for 18 additional aircraft, including six Airbus A350-1000 aircraft and six Boeing 777-9 aircraft for British Airways, and six Airbus A350-900 aircraft for Iberia. On 1 August 2025, IAG confirmed that the Boeing 737 MAX order will be allocated to
Vueling to replace their older
Airbus A320ceo aircraft.
Investment in Air Europa In November 2019, IAG announced that it planned to acquire
Air Europa from Globalia, for €1 billion. The deal, funded by external debt, and was expected to be completed in the second half of 2020, subject to regulatory approval. On 20 January 2021, IAG announced that it had renegotiated its deal to acquire Air Europa (via Iberia) for €500 million as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic. It also negotiated to delay payment to Globalia for 6 years. Completion of the deal was expected to take place in the second half of 2021 with the acquisition subject to approval by the European Commission. In September 2021, IAG announced that British Airways would terminate its major short- and medium-haul base operations at
Gatwick Airport with immediate effect resulting in the cancellation of more than 30 routes. This came after labour negotiations regarding the handover of these operations, most of which were still suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic, to a newly formed budget subsidiary within IAG failed. In August 2022, IAG converted a loan to Air Europa into a 20% shareholding. On February 23, 2023, IAG announced completion of a deal to purchase the remaining 80% of Air Europa for 400 million euros. The European Commission, in January 2024, opened an in-depth investigation into proposed acquisition of Air Europa by IAG. Some of the markets competition concerns were: 1) Spanish domestic routes, including those between peninsular Spain and the Balearic and Canary Islands; 2) Short haul routes between Madrid and some of the main EEA, plus routes between Madrid and Israel, Morocco, the UK and Switzerland; and 3) Long haul routes between Madrid and North and South America. The deal was scrapped in August 2024. On 5 June 2025, influential proxy adviser ISS urged IAG investors to vote against a remuneration policy which includes a one-off share award for CEO
Luis Gallego, at the group’s next annual general meeting on 18 June. ==Corporate affairs==