The FAA's New Secondary Cockpit Door Just Debuted On A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737, But Most Planes Won't Get It
Southwest Airlines has debuted the FAA’s new secondary cockpit barrier on a Boeing 737 MAX 8, with an initial operation dated August 29, 2025. The retractable gate, mounted in the forward galley area, is designed to provide an additional physical layer of protection when the reinforced cockpit door is open. The FAA mandate applies only to newly manufactured aircraft, so airlines are not required to retrofit the thousands of planes already in service, and no certified retrofit method is currently available. This creates a mixed fleet in which only some aircraft will carry the barrier, narrowing gradually as older jets retire and new-build replacements enter over the coming decade or more. The underlying FAA rules came after the September 11 attacks, when reinforced cockpit doors were required to withstand forced entry and gunfire. The new barrier addresses the brief exposure of the flight deck during moments when the door must be opened for crew changes or restroom access.





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