Luxury lovers, rejoice!Etihad Airways will bring its Airbus A380 back into service, the airline said on Friday.The airline will pull four of the palatial double-deckers from storage and operate them between Abu Dhabi International Airport (AUH) and Heathrow Airport (LHR) starting next summer, the airline said. The airline did not provide an exact date or month.Want more airline-specific news? Sign up for TPG’s free new biweekly Aviation newsletter.Etihad grounded its fleet of 10 A380s in March 2020 as the spread of COVID-19 effectively put a freeze on global travel. Although airlines continued to fly bare-bones schedules and cargo flights, the A380 — with four engines and seating for upward of 500 passengers in some configurations — was too inefficient and expensive to operate.The following year, then-CEO Tony Douglas confirmed that the airline planned to keep the A380s grounded “indefinitely,” saying during the World Aviation Festival in April that “they are no longer commercially sustainable. So we have taken the difficult decision to park those machines up indefinitely.“At the time, Etihad planned to reorient its fleet around the smaller but more nimble and efficient Boeing 787 and Airbus A350-1000, FlightGlobal reported.Times change, though.Travel demand has surged globally since mid-2021 as vaccinations rolled out and countries began removing travel restrictions. Airlines struggled to add enough capacity to keep up.Sign up for our daily newsletterEmail addressSign upI would like to subscribe to The Points Guy newsletters and special email promotions. The Points Guy will not share or sell your email. See privacy policy.“We have decided the time is right to return some of our A380s into the fleet to satisfy the demand which has made them financially viable once more,” current CEO Antonoaldo Neves said in a statement. “We look forward to welcoming our guests again on board this remarkable aircraft.“By adding the A380 to the London route, the airline says it will be able to free up capacity for additional frequencies on other routes, along with new destinations.Etihad will also add five Airbus A320 narrow-body jets back into service to support the A380s. Those aircraft would be used for more regional flights from the airline’s Abu Dhabi hub, allowing for more connecting capacity to accommodate all of the A380 passengers.DAVID SLOTNICK/THE POINTS GUYEtihad’s A380s feature some of the most storied and luxurious products in the sky, making its return an exciting moment for some travelers.The aircraft are configured with nine first class “Apartments,” 70 business class “Studios” and 405 economy seats, including 80 with extra legroom.Etihad also features a unique product on the A380 known as “The Residence.” Essentially a three-room suite at the front of the upper deck, the Residence has a living room, a separate bedroom and a private bathroom with a shower. The living room alone is about the size of a standard first class “Apartment” seat.DAVID SLOTNICK/THE POINTS GUYThe Residence, which often costs upward of $20,000 for a one-way flight — although award flights have been available in the past — also features amenities like private butler service, customized menus, and exclusive airport lounges and access.Etihad, meanwhile, is not the first airline to reverse course on a grounded A380 fleet.Lufthansa said in October that it would return the parked A380 to service by summer 2023. Three of its eight A380s will operate high-demand routes out of its Munich hub starting in June, with additional planes reentering service later in the summer. Lufthansa sold six additional A380s during the grounding.In a statement, Lufthansa cited “the steep rise in customer demand and the delayed delivery of ordered aircraft.”