Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/indonesia

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Indonesia AirAsia

Low-cost airline of Indonesia

Indonesia AirAsia

Low-cost airline of Indonesia

FieldValue
airlinePT Indonesia AirAsia
logoAirAsia New Logo.svg
logo_size150
imageIndonesia AirAsia Airbus A320 (PK-AZF) at Perth Airport.jpg
image_size250
captionIndonesia Airasia Airbus A320
fleet_size30
destinations33
IATAQZ
ICAOAWQ
callsignWAGON AIR
parentPT AirAsia Indonesia Tbk.
founded(as *Awair*)
commenced{{ubl
{{start date and age20000622dfyes}} (as *Awair*)
{{start date and age20051201dfyes}} (as *Indonesia AirAsia*)}}
headquartersTangerang, Banten, Indonesia
key_peopleCpt. Achmad Sadikin Abdurachman (CEO)
bases{{ublclass=nowrap
hubs{{ublclass=nowrapDenpasar
frequent_flyerBIG Loyalty Programme
website
num_employees1,715

| (as Awair) | (as Indonesia AirAsia)}} | Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta}} | Surabaya | Medan}}

Indonesia AirAsia is an Indonesian low-cost airline based in Tangerang, Banten. It operates scheduled domestic and international services and is an Indonesian associate carrier of the Malaysian AirAsia. Its main base is Soekarno–Hatta International Airport in Jakarta. Indonesia AirAsia is listed in category 1 by the Indonesian Civil Aviation Authority for airline safety quality.

History

An Awair Boeing 737-300 in September 2005; the airline would later be known as Indonesia AirAsia

Awair (1999–2005)

The airline was established as Awair (Air Wagon International) in 1999 by then-President of Indonesia Abdurrahman Wahid, who was chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama, the largest Muslim organisation in Indonesia. Wahid had a 40% stake in the airline which he relinquished after being elected president of Indonesia in late October 1999. The airline started operations on 22 June 2000 with Airbus A300, A310 and A320 aircraft, but all flights were suspended in March 2002. Awair restarted operating domestically within Indonesia as an associate of AirAsia in January 2005.

Indonesia AirAsia

On 1 December 2005, Awair changed its name to Indonesia AirAsia in line with other AirAsia branded airlines in the region. AirAsia Berhad has a 49% share in the airline, with Fersindo Nusaperkasa owning 51%. Indonesia's laws disallow majority foreign ownership on domestic civil aviation operations.

The airline, along with many others in Indonesia, was previously banned from flying to the EU. However, its ban was lifted in July 2010, together with Batavia Air. In 2011, the company appointed CIMB Securities Indonesia and Credit Suisse Securities Indonesia as joint-lead underwriters for the 20 percent IPO in the fourth quarter of that year.

Batavia Air acquisition (2012–2013)

Indonesia AirAsia in the old red and white livery

A buy out of Batavia Air was announced on 26 July 2012, that was to be done in two stages; AirAsia would buy 76.95% shares from Metro Batavia in a partnership with Fersindo Nusaperkasa (Indonesia AirAsia). Following that, by 2013, AirAsia was to acquire the remaining 23.05% held by other shareholders. The acquisition of Batavia Air by AirAsia Berhad and Fersindo created some controversy with Indonesian regulators at the time, concerned that Batavia would be majority-owned by a non-Indonesian entity.

By 11 October 2012 the deal between AirAsia Berhad, Fersindo Nusaperkasa (Indonesia AirAsia) and PT Metro Batavia had been dropped, citing high risks associated with the ailing airline.

When the cancellation of the planned takeover between Batavia and AirAsia was announced on 11 October 2012, a joint statement was issued announcing a plan to proceed with an alliance encompassing ground handling, distribution and inventory systems in Indonesia. The statement also announced a plan to deliver operational alliances between Batavia and the AirAsia group.

Batavia and Indonesia AirAsia announced a plan to form a separate joint venture to provide a regional pilot training centre in Indonesia. No details were provided on that new alliance when it was announced in early October 2012.

On 15 February 2013, the airline confirmed that it no longer had intentions to buy Batavia Air, following PT Metro Batavia's bankruptcy announcement on 30 January 2013.

Indonesia AirAsia X (2015)

Main article: Indonesia AirAsia X

In January 2015, the airline launched a long haul subsidiary named Indonesia AirAsia X, in a joint venture with its Malaysian counterpart, AirAsia X. The Indonesia AirAsia subsidiary became the country's first long haul low-cost carrier and was based at Ngurah Rai Airport in Denpasar, Bali. It flew its maiden flight on 30 January of that year with a flight from Denpasar to Taipei with an Airbus A330-300.

On 28 June 2016, Indonesia AirAsia launched the Auto Bag Drop facility at Ngurah Rai International Airport. On 12 August 2016, AirAsia Indonesia moved its flight operations from Terminal 3 to Terminal 2 at Soekarno–Hatta International Airport in preparation of the opening of the main section of Terminal 3. The airline later consolidated its flight operations at Terminal 2 on 12 December 2018, following the full opening of the Garuda Indonesia-occupied Terminal 3.

On 2 May 2019, Indonesia AirAsia inaugurates Lombok as its fifth operating base in Indonesia in addition to its existing bases in Soekarno–Hatta International Airport in Jakarta, Ngurah Rai International Airport in Bali, Kuala Namu International Airport in Medan and Juanda International Airport in Surabaya.

COVID-19 pandemic (2020–2022)

In March 2020, its long haul subsidiary, Indonesia AirAsia X, ceased flights due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The long haul arm later announced its permanent closure in October 2022, following restructuring plans of the AirAsia Group.

In July 2021, the company announced that it will temporarily stop all flights for a month from 6 July 2021 to support the government's effort to limit a spike in COVID-19 cases. The airline later resumed operations on October 2, 2021 following a two month suspension of flights.

In January 2022, Indonesia AirAsia announced the resumption of all remaining routes that were suspended from July 2022. In April 2022, the airline again announced a terminal change at Soekarno Hatta International Airport, thereby splitting its operations between Terminal 1 for domestic flights and Terminal 3 for international flights.

In February 2023, the airline announced the reactivation of its remaining eight parked aircraft from its fleet of 25 Airbus A320-200s, with a plan to acquire eight further Airbus A320s. Furthermore, the airline stated its intentions to resume long haul service to Japan and South Korea, as well as introduce new services to China and India with the acquisition of Airbus A330-900 aircraft from Thai AirAsia in 2023. But as of March 2025, these plans were never achieved.

Corporate affairs

The airline's head office is in Tangerang, Banten, adjacent to Soekarno–Hatta International Airport. It has the AirAsia logo on its roof and uses natural lighting. As of 2013 over 2,000 employees work there. Prior to the building's 2013 opening, the airline's employees worked in several offices in Jakarta. They were divided between Terminal 1A of Soekarno-Hatta Airport, Soewarna, and Menara Batavia.

Destinations

Main article: List of AirAsia Group destinations

, Indonesia AirAsia flies (or has flown) to the following destinations:

CountryCityAirportNotesRefs
AustraliaAdelaideAdelaide Airport
CairnsCairns Airport
DarwinDarwin International Airport
PerthPerth Airport
BruneiBandar Seri BegawanBrunei International Airport
CambodiaPhnom PenhPhnom Penh International Airport
Phnom Penh Techo International Airport
ChinaShenzhenShenzhen Bao'an International Airport
Hong KongHong KongHong Kong International Airport
IndiaKolkataNetaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport
IndonesiaAmbonPattimura Airport
BalikpapanSultan Aji Muhammad Sulaiman International Airport
Banda AcehSultan Iskandar Muda International Airport
Bandar LampungRadin Inten II Airport
BandungHusein Sastranegara Airport
Kertajati International Airport
BanjarmasinSyamsudin Noor Airport
BanyuwangiBanyuwangi Airport
BerauKalimarau Airport
DenpasarNgurah Rai International Airport
JakartaSoekarno–Hatta International Airport
KupangEl Tari Airport
Labuan BajoKomodo Airport
MakassarSultan Hasanuddin International Airport
ManadoSam Ratulangi International Airport
MataramLombok International Airport
MedanKualanamu International Airport
PadangMinangkabau International Airport
PalembangSultan Mahmud Badaruddin II International Airport
PekanbaruSultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport
PontianakSupadio Airport
SamarindaAji Pangeran Tumenggung Pranoto Airport
SemarangJenderal Achmad Yani International Airport
SilangitSisingamangaraja XII Airport
SoloAdisumarmo Airport
SorongDomine Eduard Osok Airport
SurabayaJuanda International Airport
Tanjung PandanH.A.S. Hanandjoeddin International Airport
TarakanJuwata Airport
YogyakartaAdisutjipto Airport
Yogyakarta International Airport
MacauMacauMacau International Airport
MalaysiaJohor BahruSenai International Airport
Kota KinabaluKota Kinabalu International Airport
Kuala LumpurKuala Lumpur International Airport
KuchingKuching International Airport
PenangPenang International Airport
PhilippinesManilaNinoy Aquino International Airport
SingaporeSingaporeChangi Airport
ThailandBangkokDon Mueang International Airport
PhuketPhuket International Airport
VietnamHo Chi Minh CityTan Son Nhat International Airport

Fleet

Current fleet

, Indonesia AirAsia operates the following aircraft:

AircraftIn serviceOrdersPassengersNotesTotal3070
Airbus A320-2003070180One crashed as Flight 8501

Former fleet

The airline previously operated the following aircraft:

  • 1 Airbus A300-600 as Awair
  • 3 Airbus A310-300 as Awair
  • 12 Boeing 737-300

Special liveries

RegistrationImageLiveryAircraft
PK-AXU[[File:PK-AXU.jpgAirasia PK-AXU in Lombok livery100px]]Lombok liveryAirbus A320-200
PK-AZNConnecting Labuan Bajo to the worldAirbus A320-200
PK-AZSSustainable ASEAN Tourism liveryAirbus A320-200
PK-AZUAirAsia Mobile Apps liveryAirbus A320-200

Incidents and accidents

  • 28 December 2014: Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501, an Airbus A320-200 registered PK-AXC (MSN 3648) with 155 passengers and 7 crew on board, crashed into the Java Sea whilst en route from Juanda International Airport in Surabaya to Changi Airport in Singapore, killing all 162 on board. Regulatory licenses for the Surabaya-Singapore route as well as Medan-Palembang route have been suspended for Indonesia AirAsia since January 2015 due to suspected licensing breaches; however, the Medan-Palembang route has been resumed.

References

References

  1. (6 June 2025). "AirAsia Aviation Group Umumkan Transisi Kepemimpinan di Indonesia AirAsia".
  2. (3 April 2007). "Directory: World Airlines". [[Flight International]].
  3. [http://hubud.dephub.go.id/?en+news+detail+1464+8 :: Directorate General Of Civil Aviation ::] {{webarchive. link. (22 February 2012)
  4. (30 November 2005). "Indonesia AirAsia Gantikan AWAIR". detik.com.
  5. Biro Komunikasi dan Informasi Publik. (30 July 2012). "AKUISISI BATAVIA AIR OLEH AIRASIA". [[Ministry of Transportation (Indonesia).
  6. "List of airlines banned within the EU". European Commission's "Transport" website.
  7. Creagh, Sunanda. (2010-07-02). "Indonesia sees EU lifting ban on more airlines". Reuters.
  8. "AirAsia Indonesia to Sell around 20 Pct Stake Via IPO - KOMPAS.com".
  9. Bernama Media – Mon, 30 July 2012. (30 July 2012). "Indonesia May Cancel Airasia's Acquisition of Batavia Air - Yahoo! News Malaysia". My.news.yahoo.com.
  10. (15 October 2012). "Indonesia - AirAsia batal beli Batavia karena 'terlalu berisiko'". BBC Indonesia.
  11. Linda Silaen. (11 October 2012). "Batavia Air CEO: AirAsia Drops Plan to Buy Carrier". Capital.gr - from 2012 Dow Jones&Company.
  12. Francezka Nangoy. (16 October 2012). "AirAsia, Batavia Air Choose Alliance Over Acquisition".
  13. Mohamad, Ardyan. (2013-02-15). "AirAsia tak minat beli Batavia Air setelah pailit".
  14. "Indonesia AirAsia X revises launch date to late January".
  15. Ni Luh Made Pertiwi. (2015-03-20). "Indonesia AirAsia X Terbang Perdana Bali-Melbourne".
  16. "Airasia Luncurkan Fasilitas Auto Bag Drop Pertama Di Indonesia {{!}} AirAsia". AirAsia.
  17. "AirAsia Relocates Operations from the Old Terminal 3 to Terminals 2E and 2F at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport {{!}} AirAsia". AirAsia.
  18. Saleh, Yudhistira Amran. "AirAsia Pindah ke Terminal 2 E-F Bandara Cengkareng Mulai 12 Agustus 2016".
  19. (11 December 2018). "AirAsia Pindah ke Terminal 2 Bandara Soetta per 12 Desember".
  20. Pratomo, Harwanto Bimo. (2 May 2019). "AirAsia Jadikan Lombok Hub Baru, Ke-5 di Indonesia".
  21. Ramli, Rully R.. (2020-10-19). "AirAsia X Berhenti Beroperasi di Indonesia, Ada Apa?".
  22. (2021-07-03). "AirAsia Indonesia to stop flights for a month from July 6". Reuters.
  23. Puspa, Anitana Widya. (2021-09-29). "Akhirnya! AirAsia Indonesia Terbang Lagi Mulai Oktober 2021".
  24. "Semua Rute AirAsia Akan Dibuka Lagi Usai Disetop Sejak September 2021".
  25. Puspa, Anitana Widya. (2022-04-06). "Dear Penumpang AirAsia, Layanan Pindah ke Terminal 1A per 12 April".
  26. Khoiri, Ahmad Masaul. "Pesawat Jumbo buat Indonesia Akan Berdatangan di 2023".
  27. "[https://web.archive.org/web/20080526140430/http://www.airasia.com/id/id/press-releases/airasia-indonesia-resmikan-kantor-pusat-baru.page AirAsia Indonesia Resmikan Kantor Pusat Baru]" ({{webarchive. link. (30 December 2014 ). AirAsia. 27 December 2014. Retrieved on 30 December 2014. "Kantor baru yang terletak di belakang Bandara Soekarno-Hatta, Cengkareng, tepatnya di Jl. Marsekal Suryadarma, Tangerang, Banten, itu juga menjadi rumah baru bagi seluruh karyawan AirAsia Indonesia yang sebelumnya berkantor di Terminal 1A Bandara Internasional Soekarno-Hatta, Menara Batavia, dan Soewarna.")
  28. "[https://web.archive.org/web/20080526140430/http://www.airasia.com/my/en/press-releases/airasia-indonesia-officiates-new-headquarters-in-jakarta.page AirAsia Indonesia Officiates New Headquarters in Jakarta]" ({{webarchive. link. (30 December 2014 ). AirAsia. 27 December 2013. Retrieved on 30 December 2014.)
  29. Adelaide, Glam. (2025-04-09). "Indonesia AirAsia launches first-ever Adelaide to Bali route with introductory fares from $199".
  30. "AirAsia pulls Cairns to Bali route, other destinations under review".
  31. "Indonesia AirAsia Adds Darwin Service in NS25".
  32. "AirAsia Hentikan Penerbangan Darwin-Bali Mulai 28 Januari 2018".
  33. "INDONESIA AIRASIA PLANS CAIRNS / BRUNEI AUGUST 2024 LAUNCH".
  34. "Cambodia opens new airport in Phnom Penh aiming to boost tourism".
  35. "Cambodia opens new airport in Phnom Penh aiming to boost tourism".
  36. "Indonesia AirAsia planning Jakarta-Shenzhen service".
  37. "INDONESIA AIRASIA SCHEDULES HONG KONG 4Q24 LAUNCH".
  38. "Indonesia AirAsia to launch services from Surabaya to Hong Kong".
  39. H, Odin. "AirAsia Resmi Buka Rute Bali-Kolkata India".
  40. "Indonesia AirAsia Terbangi Makassar-Ambon Mulai April". Investor.id.
  41. "AirAsia Buka Rute Aceh-Jakarta, Rakyat Aceh Menaruh Dukungan dan Harapan Besar".
  42. (2023-08-30). "Penerbangan AirAsia dari Bandung Pindah ke Bandara Kertajati Mulai 29 Oktober 2023".
  43. "AirAsia Buka Penerbangan Rute Banyuwangi-Kuala Lumpur PP - Radar Banyuwangi".
  44. "Strengthening Surabaya's Role as a Hub, Indonesia AirAsia Presents New Routes to Bangkok, Balikpapan, Berau, and Tarakan".
  45. (2024-06-06). "Indonesia AirAsia Bersiap Luncurkan Rute Internasional Terbaru Hubungkan Bali menuju Cairns, Australia".
  46. (2025-01-08). "Indonesia AirAsia Awali Tahun 2025 dengan Membuka Rute Internasional Baru menuju Darwin, Australia".
  47. Mediatama, Grahanusa. (January 2025). "Ini alasan AirAsia tutup rute Makassar-Jakarta".
  48. (2024-05-15). "AirAsia Tutup Rute Makassar Manado".
  49. (2022-09-21). "Indonesia AirAsia siap sukseskan Kualanamu sebagai pusat operasi penerbangan internasional".
  50. "AirAsia Terbang Perdana Jakarta-Padang, Akhirnya!".
  51. "Penerbangan Perdana Air Asia Jakarta - Padang Mendarat di Bandara Internasional Minangkabau".
  52. (2020-12-10). "AirAsia Resmikan Penerbangan Perdana di Pekanbaru".
  53. "Perdana! Maskapai Air Asia Buka Rute Penerbangan Domestik Pontianak - Jakarta".
  54. (17 December 2020). "Mendarat Perdana di APT Pranoto Samarinda, Air Asia Bawa APD Untuk Kaltim".
  55. "AirAsia Luncurkan 2 Rute Baru dari Jakarta ke Sorong dan Semarang".
  56. (2025-07-09). "Perkuat Peran Surabaya sebagai Hub, Indonesia AirAsia Hadirkan Rute Baru ke Bangkok, Balikpapan, Berau, dan Tarakan".
  57. (2019-08-19). "AirAsia teruskan ekspansi dengan buka penerbangan ke Belitung".
  58. "Strengthening Surabaya's Role as a Hub, Indonesia AirAsia Presents New Routes to Bangkok, Balikpapan, Berau, and Tarakan".
  59. "Indonesia AirAsia launches Jakarta-Macau service".
  60. (2018-01-10). "AirAsia Buka Rute Penerbangan Baru Manila-Jakarta".
  61. "INDONESIA AIRASIA ADDS DENPASAR – PHUKET FROM AUGUST 2024".
  62. (2023-05-04). "AirAsia Indonesia Buka Rute Penerbangan Jakarta – Ho Chi Minh Vietnam".
  63. (September 2025). "Global Airline Guide 2025 - Indonesia AirAsia".
  64. (5 September 2024). "AirAsia Indonesia Wants to Have 100 Aircraft".
  65. (2025-08-01). "Mengudara bersama Pesona Kota Seribu Sunset, Indonesia AirAsia Perkenalkan Livery “Labuan Bajo” untuk Dorong Pariwisata Indonesia".
  66. Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A320-216 PK-AXC Karimata Strait".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Indonesia AirAsia — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report