How the 767-200ER fits into the 767 story
767-200ER is a partially retired member of the Boeing 767 family, known for the extended-range short branch that opened early long-haul twinjet routes.
The 767-200ER earned a distinct place in the Boeing 767 family story through its engines, seating, range, service entry, and the missions operators chose it to fly.
Service entry
1984
Seating
181 to 224
Range
6,590 nm
Variant history
Why it branches from the family
The 767-200ER stands out within the Boeing 767 family because it captures the extended-range short branch that opened early long-haul twinjet routes.
It entered service in 1984 with CF6, PW4000, or JT9D options engines, typical seating for 181 to 224, and published range of about 6,590 nautical miles.
Fact rows
Reference snapshot
- ICAO designator
- B762
- Designator references
- Engines
- CF6, PW4000, or JT9D options
- Type data
- Service entry
- 1984
- Operator records
- Typical seating
- 181 to 224
- Operator layouts
- Range
- 6,590 nm
- Planning data
Return to the family page
Return to the family history for the wider program story, then compare this version with the other models that carried the design into different markets and missions.