From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Nok Air
Low-cost airline of Thailand
Low-cost airline of Thailand
| Field | Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| airline | Nok Airlines plc | ||
| บริษัท สายการบินนกแอร์ จำกัด (มหาชน) | |||
| logo | Nok Air logo.svg | ||
| logo_size | 200 | ||
| image | Boeing 737-8AS, Nok Air AN2214559.jpg | ||
| IATA | DD | ||
| ICAO | NOK | ||
| callsign | NOK AIR | ||
| founded | |||
| commenced | |||
| bases | {{ubl | class=nowrap | |
| frequent_flyer | Nok Fan Club | ||
| fleet_size | 14 | ||
| destinations | 18 | ||
| parent | Thai Airways International (8.91%) | ||
| aoc | AOC.0006 | ||
| headquarters | 222 Vibhavadi Rangsit Road, Sanambin, Don Mueang, Bangkok, Thailand | ||
| key_people | Mr. Phichit Sathapattayanon (CEO) | ||
| founder | Patee Sarasin | ||
| traded_as | |||
| assets | 6,569.00 million baht (2014) | ||
| equity | 3,771.12 million baht (2014) | ||
| revenue | 12,312.93 million baht (2014) | ||
| net_income | -471.66 million baht (2014) | ||
| website |
บริษัท สายการบินนกแอร์ จำกัด (มหาชน) | Bangkok–Don Mueang | Chiang Mai | Phuket}}
Nok Airlines plc, trading as Nok Air (; , from th [นก] meaning 'bird') is a low-cost airline in Thailand operating mostly domestic services from Bangkok's Don Mueang International Airport.
History
Nok Air was established in February 2004 as Sky Asia Co. Ltd. and started operations on 23 July 2004. As of March 2007, it had 130 employees and had reached around 1,400 employees by 2014. Nok Air began its first international service on 31 May 2007, with daily flights to Bangalore, India, but suspended these in 2020.
Nok Air serves the largest number of domestic routes within Thailand, with 24 routes.
Nok Air operates largely independently from Thai Airways, which has caused some friction between the two companies. To gain greater control of Nok Air, Thai Airways has tried to purchase the shares of other shareholders, notably Krungthai Bank. Although Thai Airways and Krungthai Bank are both state enterprises under the control of the finance ministry, Krungthai Bank refused to sell its shares in Nok Air to Thai Airways. The purchase would have lifted Thai Airways' stake in Nok Air from 39 to 49%. Evidence of Thai Airways' declining interest in Nok Air came in May 2017, when Thai Airways shareholding was diluted to 21.57% as a result of not taking up their entitlement to a new share offering. As a consequence, Thai investor Nuttapol Chulangkul became the airline's largest shareholder, owning 23.77% of the company.
Due to the preparation process to be listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET), the company name was changed to "Nok Airlines Company Limited" on 16 January 2006. Then, at its initial entry to Thailand's stock market, it was renamed "Nok Airlines Public Company Limited" (since 18 January 2013) with the trading symbol "NOK".
In late 2013, Nok Air announced a joint venture with Scoot (a low-cost subsidiary of Singapore Airlines) to form NokScoot, a low-cost airline operating medium-to long-haul international services, based at Don Mueang Airport in Bangkok. The joint venture was shut down in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
A new company slogan, "Smiling Across Asia" was unveiled in June 2016. It hints at Nok's strategy of becoming the dominant regional carrier.
On 22 December 2017, Patee Sarasin, the first Nok Air CEO (between 2004 and 2017), resigned from the company's board of directors.
Restructuring
In February 2016, Nok Air cancelled numerous flights and issued several contradictory stories to explain the cancellations. On 14 February 2016, a work stoppage was caused by about 10 pilots, which was followed by the resignation of 17 pilots. On 25 February, several flight cancellations were announced, resulting in a loss of trust from the airline's customers.
There are issues of dissension between Nok Air management and cockpit staff, charges of nepotism and questions about pilot loyalty. In its 2015 financial report released on 26 February, the airline acknowledged that the turnover of cockpit staff had exceeded the normal rate, well beyond expectations. There are just under 200 pilots working at Nok Air, considered too few for the scale of its operations.
The problem arose after Thailand tightened its aviation standards to comply with the European Aviation Safety Agency, disqualifying some pilots, Patee Sarasin, Nok Air CEO at that time, told local media. Thailand is under pressure to improve its aviation standards after US authorities downgraded the country's aviation safety rating in December 2015.
To remedy its shortage of pilots, Nok may be permitted to boost the number of its foreign pilots beyond the 40 per cent cap mandated by Thai law according to Transport Minister Arkhom Termpittayapaisith. The 40 per cent pilot quota is set by the Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand (CAAT), which aims to encourage airlines to employ more Thais as pilots. Pilots, according to the Labour Ministry, are on the list of 39 jobs where Thai nationals are preferred, jobs ranging from barbers and secretaries to certain fields of engineering. Nok in February hired 32 new pilots, bringing their total to 212.
On 30 July 2020, Nok Air filed for bankruptcy.
Nok Air was delisted from the Thai Stock Exchange on 9 January 2025, following a final seven-day window for its trading operations from 27 December 2024 to 8 January 2025.
Destinations
, Nok Air flies (or has flown) to the following destinations:
| Country | City | Airport | Notes | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | Changsha | Changsha Huanghua International Airport | ||
| Chengdu | Chengdu Tianfu International Airport | |||
| Nanning | Nanning Wuxu International Airport | |||
| Nanjing | Nanjing Lukou International Airport | |||
| Nantong | Nantong Xingdong International Airport | |||
| Yancheng | Yancheng Nanyang International Airport | |||
| Zhengzhou | Zhengzhou Xinzheng International Airport | |||
| India | Bengaluru | Kempegowda International Airport | ||
| Guwahati | Lokpriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport | |||
| Hyderabad | Rajiv Gandhi International Airport | |||
| Mumbai | Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport | |||
| Japan | Hiroshima | Hiroshima Airport | ||
| Laos | Vientiane | Wattay International Airport | ||
| Myanmar | Yangon | Yangon International Airport | ||
| Thailand | Bangkok | Don Mueang International Airport | ||
| Betong | Betong Airport | |||
| Buriram | Buriram Airport | |||
| Chiang Mai | Chiang Mai International Airport | |||
| Chiang Rai | Chiang Rai International Airport | |||
| Chumphon (Pathio) | Chumphon Airport | |||
| Hat Yai | Hat Yai International Airport | |||
| Khon Kaen | Khon Kaen Airport | |||
| Krabi | Krabi International Airport | |||
| Lampang | Lampang Airport | |||
| Loei | Loei Airport | |||
| Mae Hong Son | Mae Hong Son Airport | |||
| Mae Sot | Mae Sot Airport | |||
| Nakhon Phanom | Nakhon Phanom Airport | |||
| Nakhon Si Thammarat | Nakhon Si Thammarat Airport | |||
| Nan | Nan Nakhon Airport | |||
| Phetchabun | Phetchabun Airport | |||
| Phitsanulok | Phitsanulok Airport | |||
| Phrae | Phrae Airport | |||
| Phuket | Phuket International Airport | |||
| Ranong | Ranong Airport | |||
| Roi Et | Roi Et Airport | |||
| Sakon Nakhon | Sakon Nakhon Airport | |||
| Surat Thani | Surat Thani International Airport | |||
| Trang | Trang Airport | |||
| Ubon Ratchathani | Ubon Ratchathani Airport | |||
| Udon Thani | Udon Thani International Airport | |||
| Vietnam | Hanoi | Noi Bai International Airport | ||
| Ho Chi Minh City | Tan Son Nhat International Airport |
Miscellaneous
Nok Air also offers ferry services to domestic island destinations as well as domestic and cross border coach services to Vientiane and Pakse in Laos in conjunction with other tour operators.
Nok Air is known for their "beak" logo and livery, which includes a stylized bird's beak on the nose of the plane.
Fleet
Current fleet
, Nok Air operates the following aircraft:
| Aircraft | In service | Orders | Passengers | Notes | Total | 10 | 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boeing 737-800 | 10 | — | 189 | ||||
| Boeing 737 MAX 8 | 6 | May delivered about 3-4 years |
Former fleet
| Aircraft | Total | Introduced | Retired | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ATR 72-201 | 2 | 2009 | 2013 | |
| ATR 72-500 | 2 | 2012 | 2019 | |
| Boeing 737-400 | 14 | 2004 | 2013 | |
| De Havilland Canada Dash 8-400 | 8 | 2014 | 2023 | |
| Saab 340B | 8 | 2010 | 2014 | Operated by SGA Airlines as "Nok Mini" |
Partnerships
Nok Air a long-term partnership with Sabre and its subsidiary company.
References
References
- (5 October 2022). "List of Thailand Air Operator Certificate Holders". [[Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand]].
- "F/S & Highlight". Stock Exchange of Thailand.
- (2007-04-10). "Directory: World Airlines". [[Flight International]].
- JHA, URVASHI. (2007-11-13). "Nok Air too suspends flights to Bangalore". The Economic Times.
- (29 March 2011). "Nok Air adds more small cities to plan". [[Bangkok Post]].
- (24 January 2011). "KTB rebuffs Thai offer for Nok". Bangkok Post.
- (31 May 2017). "Airline Review – Nok Air". Destination Travel.
- (5 March 2018). "Major Shareholders". Nok Investor Relations.
- "NOK History". Nok Airlines PLC.
- "NokScoot plans 2H2014 launch with two 777s, targeting Thailand-Japan and other North Asian markets".
- (10 June 2016). "Nok Air to repair image with new slogan". Bangkok Post.
- (22 December 2017). "พาที สารสิน' ลาออก! พ้นกรรมการ 'นกแอร์'". Thansettakij.
- (22 December 2017). ""พาที" ลุกจากกรรมการ ลาพ้นนกแอร์". นิตยสารโพซิชั่นนิ่ง.
- (2016-02-29). "Mending Nok Air's broken wings". Bangkok Post.
- (14 February 2016). "Thai budget carrier Nok Air cancels flights over pilot strike". Yahoo! News.
- (2016-02-27). "More foreign pilots for Nok Air". Bangkok Post.
- (2020-07-30). "Thai court accepts budget carrier Nok Airlines' petition for bankruptcy protection".
- (2025-01-10). "The rise and fall of Nok Air: A Thai aviation saga".
- (10 January 2023). "Thailand's Nok Air to commence Hyderabad operations from 19 February". Travel Trade Journal.
- "Nok Air Adds Bangkok – Mumbai in NW24".
- (14 September 2022). "Betong".
- "Nok Air routes". Nok Airlines PLC.
- (September 2025). "Global Airline Guide 2025 - Nok Air".
- "NOK's Major Shareholders". Stock Exchange of Thailand.
- Staff, Asian Aviation. (2021-12-18). "Nok Air signs long-term deals with Sabre, Radixx".
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.
Ask Mako anything about Nok Air — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis 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