United Airlines’ largest aircraft by length are its
Boeing 777-300ER twinjets, of which data from ch-aviation shows that the Star Alliance founding member has 22 examples at its disposal aged eight years old on average. According to aeroLOPA, they seat 350 passengers, which, curiously, doesn’t make them its highest-capacity jets. Indeed, that title falls to smaller but higher-density 777-200s (364 seats) and 777-200ERs (362 seats).
Present scheduling data made available by Cirium, an aviation analytics company, shows that
United Airlines is set to operate a grand total of 806 flights with its Boeing 777-300ER fleet this month, offering 282,100 seats in the process. This represents a 7.1% year-on-year reduction compared to December 2024, when it penciled in 868 flights and 303,800 seats with the type. Let’s dive deeper into the data and see where they are flying.
Double-Daily Transpacific Rotations
This month, United Airlines’ top Boeing 777-300ER routes by frequency are a pair of double-daily transpacific corridors that both originate at California’s San Francisco International Airport (SFO), a key West Coast hub for the US ‘big three’ legacy carrier. The first of these serves Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport (MNL) in the Philippines, with competition coming from a daily non-stop rotation operated by Philippine Airlines itself.
United also flies the 777-300ER to Hong Kong International Airport (HKG) twice a day from San Francisco. Hong Kong is becoming an increasingly important destination for United Airlines as a whole, with Business Traveller highlighting in October that it had inaugurated fifth-freedom flights from there to Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City. Patrick Quayle, United’s VP of International Network, said in 2019, when a second daily flight was added, that:
“The addition of a second daily nonstop flight between San Francisco and Hong Kong offers customers more flexibility and convenience when planning travel to one of the world’s largest business markets.”
Three European Routes
Moving away from Asia and the transpacific corridor, lucrative transatlantic routes between the US and Europe also play an important role when it comes to United Airlines’ deployment of the Boeing 777-300ER. The type will serve three European routes on a daily basis this December, with the first connecting its East Coast hub at Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR) with
Frankfurt Airport (FRA), the busiest hub in all of Germany.
Frankfurt is a key European destination for United Airlines, given that its Star Alliance partner Lufthansa operates a large and diverse hub operation out of the Hessian city. With this in mind, it is also flying the Boeing 777-300ER there on a daily basis from another major East Coast hub, namely Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD). According to the DOT, Frankfurt was Dulles’ second-busiest international destination in 2024.
United Airlines’ third and final daily European rotation with the Boeing 777-300ER also originates at Washington Dulles International Airport, and serves another key Star Alliance hub in the form of Brussels (BRU). This airport is home to the Belgian flag carrier and Star Alliance member Brussels Airlines, offering strong options as far as onward connectivity is concerned. Brussels Airlines also serves this route on a seasonal basis.
Why United Airlines Still Relies On The Boeing 777-300ER In 2025
The big Boeing is still going strong at United.
The Best Of The Rest
Returning to
San Francisco International Airport, United Airlines serves four more destinations with its Boeing 777-300ER fleet from this West Coast hub, albeit only daily rather than twice-daily. Internationally, this selection includes Shanghai (PVG) and Taipei (TPE), while, domestically, the type also serves Honolulu (HNL) and Newark. It is also possible to fly from Honolulu to Guam (GUM) once a day on United’s Boeing 777-300ER jets.
The only remaining route served by United Airlines’ 777-300ER fleet this month originates in Newark, and comes in the form of a lengthy daily hop to the Middle East. Its destination is Dubai International Airport (DXB) in the United Arab Emirates, with these flights taking 13 hours and five minutes on the outbound leg and 15 hours and 25 minutes flying westbound back to Newark. United Airlines faces competition from Emirates on this route.


