Flight number
In the aviation industry, a flight number or flight designator is a code for an airline service consisting of two-character airline designator and a 1 to 4 digit number. For example, "BA 98" is a British Airways service from London-Heathrow to Toronto-Pearson. 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, "WN 417" flies from Jacksonville to Baltimore to Oakland to Los Angeles. 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 101 and the return flight from B to A would be 102, while the next pair of flights on the same route would usually be assigned codes 103 and 104.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.
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.
Codeshare
In a codeshare, airlines shares its aircraft with another airline, resulting in the flight having more than one flight number on the same sector, and either the same or different flight numbers on joined sectors.As a hypothetical example, flight QQ1234 may fly from airport AAA to BBB to CCC. The AAA-BBB segment may be serviced by airline QQ, and the BBB-CCC segment by airline RR, on a different aircraft. The same flight may also be sold as RR3210, and by a third airline SS as SS2345. Also, the individual flight legs may have multiple flight numbers: AAA-BBB may be QQ12, RR23, and SS45.
For example, Alaska Airlines flight AS61 flies from Juneau to Yakutat to Cordova to Anchorage. A ticket for the Yakutat to Anchorage segment is specified as AS61 YAK-ANC. It is even possible for a given flight number to cover a sequence beginning and ending at the same airport.
List of flight number 1 by airlines
Most flights are non-stop from A to B, and few are from A to B then to C. Aircraft type may change due to operation need.Airline | IATA Flight No | ICAO Flight No | From | To | Then to | Aircraft Type |
Aeroméxico | AM1 | AMX1 | Mexico City | Madrid | Boeing 787 | |
Air Canada | AC1 | ACA1 | Toronto Pearson | Tokyo Haneda | Boeing 777-300ER | |
Air Canada Express | QK1 AC8001 | JZA1 ACA8001 | Kingston | Toronto Pearson | De Havilland Canada DHC-8-300 | |
Air New Zealand | NZ1 | ANZ1 | London Heathrow | Los Angeles | Auckland | Boeing 777-300ER |
Air Tahiti Nui | TN1 | THT1 | Los Angeles | Papeete | Boeing 787-9 | |
AirAsia Japan | DJ1 | WAJ1 | Nagoya | Sapporo Chitose | Airbus A320-200 | |
AirAsia X | D71 | XAX1 | Kuala Lumpur | Osaka Kansai | Honolulu | Airbus A330-300 |
Alaska Airlines | AS1 | ASA1 | Washington Reagan | Seattle | Boeing 737-800 | |
All Nippon Airways | NH1 | ANA1 | Washington Dulles | Tokyo Narita | Boeing 777-300ER | |
American Airlines | AA1 | AAL1 | New York JFK | Los Angeles | Airbus A321 | |
American Eagle | CP1 | CPZ1 | San Francisco | Los Angeles | Embraer 175 | |
Biman Bangladesh Airlines | BG1 | BBC001 | Dhaka | London Heathrow | Boeing 777-300ER | |
British Airways | BA1 | BAW1 | London City | Shannon | New York JFK | Airbus A318 |
China Airlines | CI1 | CAL1 | Honolulu | Taipei Taoyuan | Airbus A350-900 | |
Delta Air Lines | DL1 | DAL1 | New York JFK | London Heathrow | Airbus A330-200/300 | |
DHL Aero Expreso | D51 | DAE1 | Miami | Panama City | Boeing 757-200PCF | |
El Al | LY1 | ELY1 | Tel Aviv | New York JFK | Boeing 787 | |
Emirates | EK1 | UAE1 | Dubai | London Heathrow | Airbus A380-800 | |
Etihad Airways | EY1 | ETD1 | Abu Dhabi | Frankfurt | Boeing 777-300ER | |
FedEx Express | FX1 | FDX1 | London Stansted | Memphis | Boeing 777-200LR | |
Finnair | AY1 | FIN1 | Helsinki | Los Angeles | Airbus A350-900 | |
Hawaiian Airlines | HA1 | HAL1 | Los Angeles | Honolulu | Airbus A330-200 | |
Japan Airlines | JL1 | JAL1 | San Francisco | Tokyo Haneda | Boeing 777-300ER | |
Japan Transocean Air | NU1 | JTA1 | Osaka Kansai | Naha | Boeing 737-800 | |
JetBlue Airways | B61 | JBU1 | New York JFK | Fort Lauderdale | Airbus A321 | |
Jin Air | LJ1 | JNA1 | Seoul Incheon | Bangkok Suvarnabhumi | Boeing 737-800 | |
Korean Air Lines | KE1 | KAL1 | Seoul Incheon | Tokyo Narita | Honolulu | Airbus A330-300 |
LATAM Chile | LA1 | LAN1 | Santiago | Puerto Bories | Airbus A320 | |
LOT Polish Airlines | LO1 | LOT1 | Warsaw | Chicago O'Hare | Boeing 787-8 | |
Lufthansa | LH1 | DLH1 | Hamburg | Frankfurt | Various | |
Malaysia Airlines | MH1 | MAS1 | London Heathrow | Kuala Lumpur | Airbus A380-800/A350-900 | |
Peach Aviation | MM1 | APJ1 | Osaka Kansai | Seoul Incheon | Airbus A320-200 | |
Qantas | QF1 | QFA1 | Sydney | Singapore | London Heathrow | Airbus A380-800 |
Qatar Airways | QR1 | QTR1 | Doha | London Heathrow | Boeing 777-300ER | |
Scandinavian Airlines | SK1 | SAS1 | Lulea | Stockholm | Boeing 737 or Airbus A320neo | |
Singapore Airlines | SQ1 | SIA1 | San Francisco | Hong Kong | Singapore | Boeing 777-300ER |
Skymark Airlines | BC1 | SKY1 | Tokyo Haneda | Naha | Boeing 737-800 | |
Southwest Airlines | WN1 | SWA1 | Dallas Love | Houston Hobby | Various destinations after DAL-to-HOU | Boeing 737-800 |
SpiceJet | SG1 | SEJ1 | Chennai | Colombo | Boeing 737-800 | |
Spirit Airlines | NK1 | NKS1 | Fort Lauderdale | Chicago O'Hare | Airbus A321 | |
Turkish Airlines | TK1 | THY1 | Istanbul | New York JFK | Boeing 777-300ER | |
United Airlines | UA1 | UAL1 | San Francisco | Singapore | Boeing 787-9 | |
UPS Airlines | 5X1 | UPS1 | Hong Kong | Cologne/Bonn | Boeing 747-400 | |
Virgin Australia | VA1 | VOZ1 | Sydney | Los Angeles | Boeing 777-300ER | |
WestJet | WS1 | WJA1 | Calgary | London Gatwick | Boeing 787-9 |