In the first half of 2026, 61 airports in 35 countries will have scheduled Airbus A380 flights. While many airports will have two or three superjumbo operators, only Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, London Heathrow, Los Angeles, Singapore, Sydney, and
Tokyo Narita will have flights by four or more carriers.
Ten scheduled airlines fly the Airbus A380: All Nippon, Asiana, British Airways, Emirates, Etihad, Korean Air, Lufthansa, Qantas, Qatar Airways, and Singapore Airlines. They plan an average of 247 daily round-trip flights between January and June, which has risen marginally from 244 daily in the same six months in 2025.
The 6 Airports With 4 Or More A380 Operators
Two airports—London Heathrow and Los Angeles—are tied for having the most A380 carriers in the world. Given that the US does not have any home users of the double-decker,
Los Angeles’ prominence is particularly notable.
Cirium Diio data shows that the California airport’s lack of a based operator means that it only has the world’s eighth-highest number of superjumbo services in the examined period. Dubai, London Heathrow, Singapore, Sydney, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Doha, and Munich all have more flights. Bangkok Suvarnabhumi is the world’s leading A380 airport without a home carrier, followed by Los Angeles.
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Airport |
A380 Operators: Anytime January-June 2026 |
Comments |
|---|---|---|
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Bangkok Suvarnabhumi |
Asiana, Emirates, Lufthansa, Qatar Airways |
Korean Air operated at times in 2025 |
|
London Heathrow |
British Airways, Emirates, Etihad, Qantas, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines |
|
|
Los Angeles |
Asiana, British Airways, Emirates, Korean Air, Lufthansa, Qantas |
Lufthansa runs until early January, then returns in late March |
|
Singapore |
Emirates, Etihad, Qantas, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines |
British Airways operated until June 2025 |
|
Sydney |
Asiana, Emirates, Qantas, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines |
Asiana will only operate through March 2026 |
|
Tokyo Narita |
All Nippon, Asiana, Emirates, Etihad, Korean Air |
Singapore Airlines operated in May/June 2025. Etihad arrives in June 2026. Asiana operates through March 2026, on what is the world’s shortest A380 route |
New York JFK Has Fallen Out Of The List
Let’s revert to the first half of 2025. In those six months, seven airports had four or more A380 operators: Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, London Heathrow, Los Angeles, New York JFK, Singapore, Sydney, and Tokyo Narita. A year on,
New York JFK has fallen out of the list.
Despite being the US’s top widebody airport and the globe’s second-busiest airport for long-haul flights, current schedules show that only two carriers will use the A380 to JFK next year: Emirates and Korean Air. In the first half of 2025, Asiana, Etihad, and Lufthansa also used the equipment there. Of course, things could change again.
The significant change means that the Big Apple’s superjumbo jumbo services have fallen by 37% year-over-year. This has pushed its ranking for flights from tenth place globally to 14th. Naturally, it plays an important role in the US’s A380 services, which have decreased by 5% in the past year.
Unusual Airbus A380 Routes: The World’s Least-Served Superjumbo Flights In December
They include the world’s shortest double-decker service.
Etihad’s Arrival Means Tokyo Narita Still Has 5 A380 Carriers
Between January and June 2025, All Nippon, Asiana, Emirates, Korean, and Singapore Airlines all used the superjumbo from Tokyo Narita. Singapore Airlines only had a time-limited operation. All Nippon, Asiana, Emirates, Etihad, and Korean Air will all use the type there in the first half of 2026.
The arrival of Etihad is the most significant change. The UAE airline has served Narita for 15 and a half years, in which time seven passenger types/variants have been used: the A330-200, A340-500, A340-600, A350-1000, 777-300ER, 787-9, and 787-10. But not the A380.
The 468-seat double-decker’s first service between Abu Dhabi and Tokyo Narita will be on June 16. EY800 will leave the UAE hub at 9:25 pm and arrive in Japan at 12:45 pm+1 local time. Returning, EY801 will depart at 6:00 pm and get home at 12:20 am+1 local time. Questions remain about the significant reduction in freight capacity on a route on which freight is important.


