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Flight number
Airline code for a journey between multiple points
Airline code for a journey between multiple points
In the aviation industry, a flight number or flight designator is a code for an airline service consisting of a two-character airline designator and a 1 to 4 digit number. For example, QF9 is a Qantas Airways service from Perth, Australia to London Heathrow. A service is called "direct" if it is covered by a single flight number, regardless of the number of stops or equipment changes. For example, QF1 flies from Sydney to Singapore to London on Qantas Airways. A given flight segment may have multiple flight numbers on different airlines under a code-sharing agreement. Strictly speaking, the flight number is just the numerical part, but it is commonly used for the entire flight designator.
The flight designator of the operating carrier of a commercial flight is used as a call sign. This is distinct from the aircraft's registration number, which identifies a specific airplane.
Conventions
A number of conventions have been developed for defining flight numbers, although these vary widely from airline to airline, and are increasingly being modified. Eastbound and northbound flights are traditionally assigned even numbers, while westbound and southbound flights have odd numbers. Other airlines will use an odd number for an outbound flight and use the next even number for the reverse inbound flight. For destinations served by multiple flights per day, numbers tend to increase during the day. Hence, a flight from point A to point B might be flight 401 and the return flight from B to A would be 402, while the next pair of flights on the same route would usually be assigned codes 403 and 404.
Flight numbers of less than three digits are often assigned to long-haul or otherwise premium flights. For example, flight number 1 is often used for an airline's "flagship" service (see below for a 'List of flight number 1 by airlines'). However Cathay Pacific assigns flight numbers which are less than 100 for cargo flights.
Four-digit numbers in the range 3000 to 5999 typically represent regional affiliate flights, while numbers larger than 6000 are generally codeshare numbers for flights operated by different airlines or even railways.
Likewise, flight numbers larger than 9000 usually refer to ferry flights; these carry no passengers and are used to relocate aircraft to or from a maintenance base, or from one air travel market to another in order to start new commercial flights. Flight numbers starting with 8 are often used for charter flights, but it always depends on the commercial carrier's choice.
Flight numbering system in mainland China
The People's Republic of China uses a completely different system for assigning flight segments than most countries; prior to 1988 reformation, there was only one major airline in mainland China, CAAC, which initially used “the first digit of the flight number represents the base airport (1 North China, 2 Northwest China, 3 South China, 4 Southwest China, 5 East China, and 6 Northeast China) for domestic flights, and the end of the number has an odd digit for departures and an even digit for return trips”. In the 1980s, a second digit joined, indicating the destination of flights (many domestic flights of Air China and China Eastern from their base still follow this rule); one-digit and two-digit flight numbers are usually reserved for executive charters or special mission flights (e.g., the flight carrying the black boxes and American investigators of the China Eastern Airlines Flight 5735 in 2022 used flight numbers CA79 and CA80). With the privatization and booming of China's civil aviation, in 2004 the CAAC issued a system for allocating flight numbers across the country, with Air China allocated 1XXX, 4XXX, and 9XX, China Eastern 2XXX and 5XXX, China Southern 3XXX and 6XXX, Hainan Airlines 7XXX, Sichuan and Xiamen 8XXX, and stipulating that Chinese airlines should not use the same flight numbers each other. However, this rule is no longer strictly enforced, as the allocated numbers have become shortage of use.
As a result, there are three special cases in China:
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Flight number 9XXX may be a regular flight, while smaller number like 500 or 2000 might be used on ferry flights or codeshare ones.
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Flagship flights do not use one-digit or two-digit flight numbers, and may even be four-digit flight numbers.
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Flight numbers in the event of an aviation accident will not be retired, as seen on Air China Flight 129 which is still active as of January 2025 (albeit using a different type of aircraft). Still, there are exceptions, as with the case of the aforementioned China Eastern Airlines Flight 5735.
List of flight number 1 by airline
Most flights are non-stop from A to B, and few are from A to B then to C (both A-B and B-C have flight number 1). Aircraft type may change due to operation need or unforeseen circumstance.
| Airline | IATA Flight No | ICAO Flight No | From | To | Then to (if applicable) | Aircraft Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aeroméxico | AM1 | AMX1 | MEX Mexico City | ESP Madrid | Boeing 787 | |
| Air Canada | AC1 | ACA1 | CAN Toronto–Pearson | JPN Tokyo–Haneda | Boeing 777-300ER | |
| Air Canada Express | QK1 | JZA1 | CAN Montreal | CAN Ottawa | Bombardier CRJ900 | |
| Air France | AF1 | AFR1 | US New York–JFK | FRA Paris–CDG | Boeing 777-200 / 777-300ER | |
| Air Japan | NQ1 | AJX1 | JPN Tokyo–Narita | THA Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi | Boeing 787-8 | |
| Air Macau | NX1 | AMU1 | PRC Beijing–Capital | MAC Macau | Airbus A321 | |
| Air New Zealand | NZ1 | ANZ1 | US New York–JFK | NZL Auckland | Boeing 787-9 | |
| Air Tahiti Nui | TN1 | THT1 | US Los Angeles | TAH Papeete | Boeing 787-9 | |
| Alaska Airlines | AS1 | ASA1 | US Washington–Reagan | US Seattle | Boeing 737-800 | |
| American Airlines | AA1 | AAL1 | US New York–JFK | US Los Angeles | Airbus A321 | |
| Cape Air | 9K1 | KAP1 | US Martha's Vineyard | US Nantucket | Cessna 402 | |
| Delta Air Lines | DL1 | DAL1 | UK London–Heathrow | Boeing 767-400ER | ||
| El Al | LY1 | ELY1 | ISR Tel Aviv | US New York–JFK | Boeing 787-9 | |
| Emirates | EK1 | UAE1 | UAE Dubai | UK London–Heathrow | Airbus A380-800 | |
| Etihad Airways | EY1 | ETD1 | UAE Abu Dhabi | US New York–JFK | Airbus A380-800 / Boeing 787-9 | |
| FedEx Express | FX1 | FDX1 | UK London–Stansted | US Memphis | Boeing 777F | |
| Finnair | AY1 | FIN1 | FIN Helsinki | US Los Angeles | Airbus A350-900 | |
| Flydubai | FZ1 | FDB1 | UAE Dubai | QAT Doha | [Boeing 737-MAX 8](737-max-8) | |
| Hawaiian Airlines | HA1 | HAL1 | US Los Angeles | US Honolulu | Airbus A330-200 | |
| Japan Airlines | JL1 | JAL1 | US San Francisco | JPN Tokyo–Haneda | Boeing 777-300ER | |
| Japan Transocean Air | NU1 | JTA1 | JPN Osaka−Kansai | JPN Okinawa−Naha | Boeing 737-800 | |
| JetBlue Airways | B61 | JBU1 | US New York–JFK | US Fort Lauderdale | Airbus A321-200 / Airbus A320-200 | |
| Jetstar | JQ1 | JST1 | AUS Melbourne | US Honolulu | Boeing 787-8 | |
| Jin Air | LJ1 | JNA1 | KOR Seoul–Incheon | THA Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi | Boeing 737-800 | |
| Korean Air Lines | KE1 | KAL1 | JPN Tokyo–Narita | US Honolulu | Boeing 777-200ER | |
| LATAM Chile | LA1 | LAN1 | CHL Santiago | CHL Puerto Natales | Airbus A320 | |
| LOT Polish Airlines | LO1 | LOT1 | POL Warsaw | US Chicago–O'Hare | Boeing 787-8 | |
| Lufthansa | LH1 | DLH1 | GER Hamburg | GER Frankfurt | Airbus A321 / A320neo | |
| Malaysia Airlines | MH1 | MAS1 | UK London–Heathrow | MYS Kuala Lumpur | Airbus A350-900 | |
| Nauru Airlines | ON1 | RON1 | Nauru Nauru | AUS Brisbane | Boeing 737-300 | |
| Qantas | QF1 | QFA1 | AUS Sydney | SIN Singapore | UK London–Heathrow | Airbus A380-800 |
| Qatar Airways | QR1 | QTR1 | QAT Doha | UK London–Heathrow | Boeing 777-200LR / 777-300ER / Airbus A350-900 | |
| Scandinavian Airlines | SK1 | SAS1 | SWE Lulea | SWE Stockholm | Airbus A320neo | |
| Skymark Airlines | BC1 | SKY1 | JPN Tokyo–Haneda | JPN Fukuoka | Boeing 737-800 | |
| Southwest Airlines | WN1 | SWA1 | USA Dallas–Love Field | USA Houston–Hobby | USA Corpus Christi | Boeing 737-700 / 737-800 / [737-MAX 8](737-max-8) |
| SpiceJet | SG1 | SEJ1 | IND Chennai | Sri Lanka Colombo | Boeing 737-800 | |
| Spirit Airlines | NK1 | NKS1 | US Fort Lauderdale | US Chicago–O'Hare | Airbus A321 / Airbus A321neo | |
| Starlux Airlines | JX1 | SJX1 | US Los Angeles | Taiwan Taipei–Taoyuan | Airbus A350-900 | |
| Turkish Airlines | TK1 | THY1 | TUR Istanbul | US New York–JFK | Boeing 777-300ER | |
| United Airlines | UA1 | UAL1 | US San Francisco | SIN Singapore | Boeing 787-9 | |
| Zipair Tokyo | ZG1 | TZP1 | US Honolulu | JPN Tokyo–Narita | Boeing 787-8 |
A notable former flight number 1 was British Airways flight BA1, operated by the Concorde between London Heathrow and New York's John F. Kennedy airport. After the retirement of Concorde in 2003, the flight number was retired with it, but in 2009 it was given to the all business class A318 flight between London City Airport and New York JFK via Shannon in Ireland. This route ceased operation in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and British Airways has since announced it will not be restarting the service.
Flight number changes
Flight numbers are often taken out of use after a crash or a serious incident. Examples include:
- Following the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the airline changed the flight number for subsequent flights following the same route to MH 318.
- After the crash of Air France Flight 447 over the Atlantic Ocean, a regular scheduled flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, was changed to Air France Flight 445.
- Following the crash of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 in July 2013, Asiana change the numbered flight pairs from Asiana Airlines 213/214 to 211/212.
- Following the crash of Air India Flight 171 in Ahmedabad in June 2025, Air India changed the Ahmedabad to London Gatwick flight number to AI159.
Flight number conservation
Airline mega mergers, in markets such as the United States, have made it necessary to break conventional flight numbering schemes. Organizations such as IATA, ICAO, ARC, as well as CRS systems and the FAA's ATC systems limit flight numbers to four digits (0001 to 9999). The pool of available flight numbers has been outstripped by demand for them by emergent mega-carriers. As such, some carriers use the same flight number for back-and-forth flights (e.g., DCA-PBI-DCA), or in other cases carriers have assigned a single flight number to a multi-leg flight (e.g., ICT-DAL-HOU-MDW-OMA-DEN-ABQ-LAS-BDL).
Flight designator
Although 'flight number' is the term used colloquially, the official term as defined in the Standard Schedules Information Manual (SSIM) published annually by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) Schedules Information Standards Committee (SISC), is flight designator. Officially the term 'flight number' refers to the numeric part (up to four digits) of a flight code. For example, in the flight codes QF103 and AF296Q, "103" and "296" are flight numbers. Even within the airline and airport industry, it is common to use the colloquial term rather than the official term.
Spacecraft
Flight numbers are also sometimes used for spacecraft, though a flight number for an expendable rocket (say, Ariane 5 Flight 501) might more reasonably be called the serial number of the vehicle used, since an expendable rocket can only be launched once. Space Shuttle missions used numbers with the STS prefix, for example, STS-93. SpaceX uses sequential numbers for flights of reused boosters. As an example, Crew-2 used booster B1061.2 (the second flight of booster B1061).
References
References
- IATA Passenger Glossary of Terms (15 June 2018) [www.iata.org/whatwedo/passenger/.../IATA-Passenger-Glossary-of-Terms.xlsx]
- [[ICAO]], "Glossary" [https://www.icao.int/dataplus_archive/Documents/GLOSSARY.docx]
- Peter Newell, "Flight Numbering Alternatives", ''Ascend: A Magazine for Airline Executives'', issue 2, 2014 [http://www.ascendforairlines.com/2014-issue-no-2/flight-numbering-alternatives]{{Dead link. (October 2025)
- "AeroMéxico (AM) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "AM1 schedule. (Aeromexico flight: Mexico City -> Madrid)".
- "Air Canada (AC) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "AC1 schedule. (Air Canada flight: Toronto -> Tokyo)".
- "QK1 (JZA1) Jazz Flight Tracking and History 14-Feb-2024 (CYUL-CYOW)".
- "AF1 schedule. (Air France flight: New York -> Paris)".
- "Air Japan (NQ)#1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "Air Japan Schedules Bangkok Launch in Feb 2024".
- "Air Macau (NX)#1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "NX1 schedule. (Air Macau flight: Beijing -> Macau)".
- "NZ1 schedule. (Air New Zealand flight: New York -> Auckland)".
- "Air Tahiti Nui (TN) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "TN2 schedule. (Air Tahiti Nui flight: Tahiti -> Los Angeles)".
- "Alaska Airlines (AS) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "AS1 schedule. (Alaska Airlines flight: Washington -> Seattle)".
- "American Airlines (AA) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "AA1 schedule. (American Airlines flight: New York -> Los Angeles)".
- "Cape Air (9K) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "9K1 schedule. (Cape Air flight: New York -> Nantucket via Martha's Vineyard)".
- "Delta (DL) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "DL1 schedule. (Delta Air Lines flight: New York -> London)".
- "El Al (LY) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "LY1 schedule. (EL AL flight: Tel Aviv-Yafo -> New York)".
- "Emirates (EK) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "EK1 schedule. (Emirates flight: Dubai -> London)".
- "Etihad Airways (EY) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "Etihad Designates Flight Number 1 New York Service From April 2024".
- "FX1 (FDX1) FedEx Flight Tracking and History 09-Mar-2024 (STN / EGSS-KMEM)".
- "AY1 schedule. (Finnair flight: Helsinki -> Los Angeles)".
- "flydubai (FZ) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "FZ1 schedule. (flydubai flight: Dubai -> Doha)".
- "Hawaiian Airlines (HA) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "HA1 schedule. (Hawaiian Airlines flight: Los Angeles -> Honolulu)".
- "Japan Airlines (JL) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "JL1 schedule. (JAL flight: San Francisco -> Tokyo)".
- "NU1 schedule. (Japan Transocean Air flight: Osaka -> Okinawa)".
- "JetBlue (B6) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "B61 schedule. (JetBlue Airways flight: New York -> Fort Lauderdale)".
- "Jetstar (JQ)#1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "JQ1 schedule. (Jetstar Airways flight: Melbourne -> Honolulu)".
- "Jin Air (LJ) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "Jin Air - All Nonstop Flights from ICN to BKK".
- "Korean Air Lines Co. (KE) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "KE1 schedule. (Korean Air Lines flight: Seoul -> Honolulu via Tokyo)".
- "LAN Airlines (LA) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "LA1 schedule. (LATAM Airlines Group flight: Santiago -> Puerto Natales)".
- "Lot - Polskie Linie Lotnicze (LO) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "LO1 schedule. (LOT Polish Airlines flight: Warsaw -> Chicago)".
- "Lufthansa (LH) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "LH1 schedule. (Lufthansa flight: Hamburg -> Frankfurt)".
- "Malaysia Airlines (MH) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "MH1 schedule. (Malaysia Airlines flight: London -> Kuala Lumpur)".
- "Nauru Airlines (ON)#1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "ON1 schedule. (Nauru Airlines flight: Nauru Island -> Brisbane)".
- "Qantas (QF) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "QF1 schedule. (Qantas flight: Sydney -> London via Singapore)".
- "Qatar Airways (QR) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "QR1 schedule. (Qatar Airways flight: Doha -> London)".
- "SAS (SK) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "SK1 schedule. (SAS flight: Lulea -> Stockholm)".
- "Flight history for SAS flight SK1".
- "BC1 schedule. (Skymark Airlines flight: Tokyo -> Fukuoka)".
- "Southwest (WN) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "Southwest Airlines flight WN 1 schedule.".
- "SpiceJet (SG) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "SG1 schedule. (SpiceJet flight: Chennai -> Colombo)".
- "Spirit Airlines 1".
- "NK1 schedule. (Spirit Airlines flight: Fort Lauderdale -> Chicago)".
- "Starlux Airlines 1".
- "JX1 schedule. (Starlux Airlines flight: Los Angeles -> Taipei)".
- "Turkish Airlines (TK) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "TK1 schedule. (Turkish Airlines flight: Istanbul -> New York)".
- "United (UA) #1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "UA1 schedule. (United Airlines flight: San Francisco -> Singapore)".
- "Zipair Tokyo (ZG)#1 ✈ FlightAware".
- "ZG1 schedule. (ZIPAIR Tokyo Inc. flight: Honolulu -> Tokyo)".
- (2014-03-13). "Malaysia Airlines to Retire Flight Number 370 - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ".
- (8 June 2009). "AF 445 statt AF 447: Air France ändert Flugnummer auf der tragischen Unglücksroute". Baseler Zeitung.
- Mather, Kate. (2013-08-06). "Asiana Airlines to change number of Seoul-S.F. flight after crash".
- (June 9, 2015). "The Science behind Flight Numbers".
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