IATA airport code
An IATA airport code, also known as an IATA location identifier, IATA station code, or simply a location identifier, is a unique three-letter geocode designating many airports, cities and metropolitan areas around the world, defined by the International Air Transport Association. The characters prominently displayed on baggage tags attached at airport check-in desks are an example of a way these codes are used.
The assignment of these codes is governed by IATA Resolution 763, and it is administered by the IATA's headquarters in Montreal, Canada. The codes are published semi-annually in the IATA Airline Coding Directory.
IATA also provides codes for airport handling entities, and for certain railway stations.
Alphabetical lists of airports sorted by IATA code are available. A list of railway station codes, shared in agreements between airlines and rail lines such as Amtrak, SNCF, and Deutsche Bahn, is available. However, many railway administrations have their own list of codes for their stations, such as Amtrak station codes.
History
Airport codes arose out of the convenience that the practice brought pilots for location identification in the 1930s. Initially, pilots in the United States used the two-letter code from the National Weather Service for identifying cities. This system became unmanageable for cities and towns without an NWS identifier, and the use of two letters allowed only a few hundred combinations; a three-letter system of airport codes was implemented. This system allowed for 17,576 permutations, assuming all letters can be used in conjunction with each other.In the early days of aviation, airport codes frequently adopted the naming conventions previously established by weather stations, railway stations, and other commercial or governmental outposts that communicated by radio or telegraph. The code names for those stations, which usually predated the use of two-way radio and even radiotelephony itself, reflected the need for terse, standardized signaling patterns that could be easily transmitted and correctly received via radiotelegraphy and Morse code.
Naming conventions
National policies
Canada
Canada's unusual codes, which bear little to no similarity with any conventional abbreviation to the city's name, originated from the two-letter codes used to identify weather reporting stations in the 1930s. The letters preceding the two-letter code follow the following format:- Y – for "Yes", this letter was used when the station shared its location with an airport.
- W – for "Without", when the weather-reporting station did not share its location with an airport.
- U – used when the station was located together with a non-directional beacon.
- X – suggesting that the last two letters of a code were already in use by a Canadian airport.
- Z – indicated that an airport code had been used for the identification of an airport in the U.S.
- VR for Vancouver
- TZ for Toronto
- QB for Quebec City
- WG for Winnipeg
- SJ for Saint John
- YC for Calgary
- OW for Ottawa
- EG for Edmonton
Four of the ten provincial capital airports in Canada have ended up with codes beginning with YY, including:
- YYZ for Toronto, Ontario
- YYJ for Victoria, British Columbia
- YYT for St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
- YYG for Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
New Zealand
Numerous New Zealand airports use codes that contain the letter Z, to distinguish them from similar airport names in other countries. Some examples are HLZ for Hamilton, ZQN for Queenstown, and WSZ for Westport.United States
Since the United States Navy reserved "N" codes, and to prevent confusion with Federal Communications Commission broadcast call signs, which begin with "W" or "K", the airports of certain U.S. cities whose name begins with one of these letters had to adopt "irregular" airport codes:- APC for Napa, California
- ASH for Nashua, New Hampshire
- BNA for Nashville, Tennessee
- EWR for Newark, New Jersey
- EYW for Key West, Florida
- HVN for New Haven, Connecticut
- ILM for Wilmington, North Carolina
- MCI for Kansas City, Missouri
- MSY for New Orleans, Louisiana
- OME for Nome, Alaska
- ORF for Norfolk, Virginia
In addition, since three letter codes starting with Q are widely used in radio communication, cities whose name begins with "Q" also had to find alternate codes, as in the case of:
Even this practice is not followed universally. For instance Owerri in Nigeria uses the code QOW.
IATA codes should not be confused with the FAA identifiers of U.S. airports. Most FAA identifiers agree with the corresponding IATA codes, but some do not, such as Saipan, whose FAA identifier is GSN and its IATA code is SPN, and some coincide with IATA codes of non-U.S. airports.
Naming conventions in general
Many airport codes consist of the first three letters of the city where the airport is located, for instance:- AMS for Amsterdam
- ATL for Atlanta
- BOS for Boston
- CLE for Cleveland
- DEL for Delhi
- SAN for San Diego
- BER for Berlin
- GLA for Glasgow
- MEX for Mexico City
- DEN for Denver
- IST for Istanbul
- SIN for Singapore
- HAN for Hanoi
- ALA for Almaty
- BLR for Bengaluru
- ORK for Cork
- EWR for Newark
- GDL for Guadalajara
- JNB for Johannesburg
- HKG for Hong Kong
- SLC for Salt Lake City
- WAW for Warsaw
- NAN, which reflects the pronunciation of "Nadi" as in Fijian, where "d" is realized as the prenasalized stop
- DFW for Dallas/Fort Worth
- DTW for Detroit–Wayne County
- LBA for Leeds–Bradford
- MSP for Minneapolis–Saint Paul
- RDU for Raleigh–Durham
- JFK for New York's John F. Kennedy
- LHR for London's Heathrow Airport
- CDG for Paris's Charles de Gaulle
The code also sometimes comes from the airport's former name, such as Orlando International Airport's MCO, or Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, which is coded ORD for its original name: Orchard Field. In rare cases, the code comes from the airport's unofficial name, such as Kahului Airport's OGG.
Cities with multiple commercial airports
In large metropolitan areas, airport codes are often named after the airport itself instead of the city it serves, while another code is reserved which refers to the city itself which can be used to search for flights to any of its airports. For instance:- Beijing – Capital and Daxing
- Belo Horizonte – Confins and Pampulha
- Bucharest – Otopeni is named after the town of Otopeni where the airport is located, while the city also has a business airport inside the city limits named Băneasa.
- Buenos Aires – Ezeiza is named after the suburb in Ezeiza Partido where the airport is located, while Aeroparque Jorge Newbery is in the city proper.
- Chicago – O'Hare, named after Orchard Field, the airport's former name, Midway, and Rockford.
- Jakarta – Soekarno–Hatta is named after Cengkareng, the district in which the airport is located, while the city also has another airport, Halim Perdanakusuma. JKT used to refer to the city's former airport, Kemayoran Airport, which closed down in the mid-1980s.
- London – Heathrow, Gatwick, City, Stansted, Luton, and Southend
- Milan – Malpensa, Linate, and Orio al Serio
- Montreal – Trudeau, Mirabel, and Metropolitan
- Moscow – Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo, Vnukovo, Zhukovsky, business airport Ostafyevo, and military air base Chkalovsky
- Mumbai – Navi Mumbai International airport – Juhu Aerodrome
- New York City – John F. Kennedy, LaGuardia, and Newark
- Osaka – Itami, Kansai, and Kobe
- Paris – Orly, Charles de Gaulle, Le Bourget, and Beauvais
- Rio de Janeiro – Galeão and Santos Dumont
- Rome – Fiumicino and Ciampino
- São Paulo – Congonhas, Guarulhos, and Campinas
- Sapporo – Chitose and Okadama
- Seoul – Incheon and Gimpo
- Stockholm – Arlanda, Bromma, Nyköping–Skavsta, and Västerås
- Tenerife – Tenerife North and Tenerife South
- Tokyo – Haneda and Narita
- Toronto – Pearson, Billy Bishop, Hamilton, and Waterloo
- Washington, D.C. – Dulles, Reagan, and Baltimore–Washington
- Almaty – Self-named and Boraldai
- Bangkok – Suvarnabhumi and Don Mueang
- Belfast – International and George Best
- Berlin – Self-named. The city also previously had three airports, Tempelhof, Schönefeld and Tegel, with THF and TXL both now closed. The former Berlin Schönefeld Airport was absorbed into Berlin Brandenburg Airport, with the old Schönefeld terminal becoming Terminal 5.
- Chengdu – Shuangliu, Tianfu, and Huaizhou
- Colombo – Bandaranaike and Ratmalana
- Dakar – Senghor and Diass
- Dallas–Fort Worth – Self-named, Love Field, Meacham, Alliance, and Addison
- Dubai – Self-named and Al Maktoum
- Goa – Dabolim Airport and Manohar International Airport
- Glasgow – International and Prestwick
- Houston – Hobby, George Bush Intercontinental, and Ellington
- Istanbul – Self-named, Sabiha Gökçen, and Atatürk
- Johannesburg – O. R. Tambo and Lanseria
- Kuala Lumpur – Sepang and Subang
- Kyiv – Zhuliany and Boryspil
- Los Angeles – Self-named, San Bernardino, Ontario, Orange County, Van Nuys, Palmdale, Long Beach, and Burbank
- Medan – Soewondo and Kualanamu
- Medellín – José María Córdova and Olaya Herrera
- Mexico City – Self-named and Felipe Ángeles
- Melbourne – Tullamarine, Essendon, and Avalon
- Miami – Self-named, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach
- Nagoya – Centrair and Komaki
- San Diego – Self-named and Tijuana. TIJ is physically located in Tijuana, Mexico, but offers access directly to and from the US via the Cross Border Xpress.
- San Francisco – Self-named, Oakland, San Jose–Mineta, and Sonoma–Schulz
- Seattle – Tacoma , Boeing Field, and Paine Field
- Shanghai – Pudong and Hongqiao
- Taipei – Taoyuan and Songshan
- Tehran – Imam Khomeini and Mehrabad
- Tel Aviv – Ben Gurion and Sde Dov
- Yogyakarta — Adisutjipto and International
- Juan Santamaría International Airport is in Alajuela, serving the capital San José de Costa Rica. While Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport is in San Jose, California, the United States.
- Birmingham–Shuttlesworth International Airport is in Birmingham, Alabama, the United States and Birmingham Airport is in Birmingham, England, United Kingdom.
- Portland International Jetport is in Portland, Maine, while Portland International Airport is in Portland, Oregon.
- Manchester Airport is in Manchester, England, United Kingdom, while Manchester-Boston Regional Airport is in Manchester, New Hampshire, United States.
- Arturo Merino Benítez International Airport is in Santiago, Chile; while Antonio Maceo Airport is in Santiago, Cuba; Santiago–Rosalía de Castro Airport is in Santiago de Compostela, Spain; and Cibao International Airport serves Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic.