FCAH Aerospace has rebranded as First Class Air, consolidating five aviation aftermarket companies under a single identity as the Louisville, Kentucky-based company seeks to present a unified face to customers in a narrow corner of the market.
The company announced the change on the eve of MRO Americas 2026 in Orlando.
The new platform brings together Cargo Repair, First Class Air Support, Cobalt Aero Services, Innodyne Systems and Survival Products under the First Class Air name.
The company said the structure is meant to give customers one entry point into a business that spans distribution, MRO and DER repair, PMA manufacturing, aircraft teardown, exchange programs and supply chain support. It also said its AVI business will now operate as Survival Products, folding its inflatables and survival-equipment work into a more focused identity.
In an interview at MRO Americas 2026, Fred Sontag, Vice President of the company, framed the move as an effort to fix a messaging problem. He said the old FCAH Aerospace identity never fully explained what the company was or why its mix of businesses fit together. The First Class Air brand, he said, is meant to give employees and customers one clear picture focused on what the company does and where it believes it stands apart.
Sontag said the company is focused on a tight niche centered on cargo aircraft support, parts and repairs, particularly for older freighters.
Its core business remains selling parts, repairing parts and running labor-intensive MRO operations, while a smaller OEM unit produces evacuation slides and rafts.
He said recent commercial distribution activity should give the company another avenue for growth, with a newly signed distribution agreement expected to be announced separately.
Sontag described a market in flux. Retirements, part-outs and aircraft parked earlier than expected have added uncertainty to the aftermarket, but they have also created opportunities for companies positioned to source assets and support aging fleets.
He said the 747 and 767 First Class Air focuses on still dominate much of the cargo aftermarket today, while the 777 is starting to emerge as an increasingly important freighter platform.
First Class Air holds more than 5 million parts in inventory and supports customers across North America, Asia, Europe and the Middle East.

