How can I see all routes flown by a given airline?










14















I've been trying to find a tool that could give me a list or map of all the destinations of a certain airline.



Something like this easyjet's route map, but for all airlines.










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    @fkraiem: Many airlines are, for some reason, very circumspect about where they fly and how often. All you can do on many airline websites is to search for connections between points that you already suspect they have routes to, but publishing an actual route map (or, God forbid, a full timetable!) definitely seems to have fallen out of fashion.

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:45






  • 7





    (And yes, I would in fact like to know what's the matter with the people who run those airlines).

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:46











  • Related: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/17180/…

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:13






  • 1





    @HenningMakholm when the website is maintained by a third party (outsourced), airline's tend to cancel pages that do not change dynamically and need an actual person to update (eg. data that do not come from an active system, such as Amadeus)..

    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:31







  • 5





    Not a real answer, rather an additional chance if nothing else helps: Fly with the airline in question. In their on-board magazines, most airlines have a route map somewhere to "show off" to potential regular customers where you can fly with them.

    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 26 '16 at 22:20















14















I've been trying to find a tool that could give me a list or map of all the destinations of a certain airline.



Something like this easyjet's route map, but for all airlines.










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    @fkraiem: Many airlines are, for some reason, very circumspect about where they fly and how often. All you can do on many airline websites is to search for connections between points that you already suspect they have routes to, but publishing an actual route map (or, God forbid, a full timetable!) definitely seems to have fallen out of fashion.

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:45






  • 7





    (And yes, I would in fact like to know what's the matter with the people who run those airlines).

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:46











  • Related: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/17180/…

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:13






  • 1





    @HenningMakholm when the website is maintained by a third party (outsourced), airline's tend to cancel pages that do not change dynamically and need an actual person to update (eg. data that do not come from an active system, such as Amadeus)..

    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:31







  • 5





    Not a real answer, rather an additional chance if nothing else helps: Fly with the airline in question. In their on-board magazines, most airlines have a route map somewhere to "show off" to potential regular customers where you can fly with them.

    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 26 '16 at 22:20













14












14








14


5






I've been trying to find a tool that could give me a list or map of all the destinations of a certain airline.



Something like this easyjet's route map, but for all airlines.










share|improve this question
















I've been trying to find a tool that could give me a list or map of all the destinations of a certain airline.



Something like this easyjet's route map, but for all airlines.







online-resources airlines maps






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 7 '16 at 13:40









Berwyn

26.3k658133




26.3k658133










asked Jun 26 '16 at 13:35









RateYourWayRateYourWay

714




714







  • 5





    @fkraiem: Many airlines are, for some reason, very circumspect about where they fly and how often. All you can do on many airline websites is to search for connections between points that you already suspect they have routes to, but publishing an actual route map (or, God forbid, a full timetable!) definitely seems to have fallen out of fashion.

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:45






  • 7





    (And yes, I would in fact like to know what's the matter with the people who run those airlines).

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:46











  • Related: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/17180/…

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:13






  • 1





    @HenningMakholm when the website is maintained by a third party (outsourced), airline's tend to cancel pages that do not change dynamically and need an actual person to update (eg. data that do not come from an active system, such as Amadeus)..

    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:31







  • 5





    Not a real answer, rather an additional chance if nothing else helps: Fly with the airline in question. In their on-board magazines, most airlines have a route map somewhere to "show off" to potential regular customers where you can fly with them.

    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 26 '16 at 22:20












  • 5





    @fkraiem: Many airlines are, for some reason, very circumspect about where they fly and how often. All you can do on many airline websites is to search for connections between points that you already suspect they have routes to, but publishing an actual route map (or, God forbid, a full timetable!) definitely seems to have fallen out of fashion.

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:45






  • 7





    (And yes, I would in fact like to know what's the matter with the people who run those airlines).

    – Henning Makholm
    Jun 26 '16 at 15:46











  • Related: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/17180/…

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:13






  • 1





    @HenningMakholm when the website is maintained by a third party (outsourced), airline's tend to cancel pages that do not change dynamically and need an actual person to update (eg. data that do not come from an active system, such as Amadeus)..

    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:31







  • 5





    Not a real answer, rather an additional chance if nothing else helps: Fly with the airline in question. In their on-board magazines, most airlines have a route map somewhere to "show off" to potential regular customers where you can fly with them.

    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 26 '16 at 22:20







5




5





@fkraiem: Many airlines are, for some reason, very circumspect about where they fly and how often. All you can do on many airline websites is to search for connections between points that you already suspect they have routes to, but publishing an actual route map (or, God forbid, a full timetable!) definitely seems to have fallen out of fashion.

– Henning Makholm
Jun 26 '16 at 15:45





@fkraiem: Many airlines are, for some reason, very circumspect about where they fly and how often. All you can do on many airline websites is to search for connections between points that you already suspect they have routes to, but publishing an actual route map (or, God forbid, a full timetable!) definitely seems to have fallen out of fashion.

– Henning Makholm
Jun 26 '16 at 15:45




7




7





(And yes, I would in fact like to know what's the matter with the people who run those airlines).

– Henning Makholm
Jun 26 '16 at 15:46





(And yes, I would in fact like to know what's the matter with the people who run those airlines).

– Henning Makholm
Jun 26 '16 at 15:46













Related: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/17180/…

– JonathanReez
Jun 26 '16 at 19:13





Related: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/17180/…

– JonathanReez
Jun 26 '16 at 19:13




1




1





@HenningMakholm when the website is maintained by a third party (outsourced), airline's tend to cancel pages that do not change dynamically and need an actual person to update (eg. data that do not come from an active system, such as Amadeus)..

– Nean Der Thal
Jun 26 '16 at 19:31






@HenningMakholm when the website is maintained by a third party (outsourced), airline's tend to cancel pages that do not change dynamically and need an actual person to update (eg. data that do not come from an active system, such as Amadeus)..

– Nean Der Thal
Jun 26 '16 at 19:31





5




5





Not a real answer, rather an additional chance if nothing else helps: Fly with the airline in question. In their on-board magazines, most airlines have a route map somewhere to "show off" to potential regular customers where you can fly with them.

– O. R. Mapper
Jun 26 '16 at 22:20





Not a real answer, rather an additional chance if nothing else helps: Fly with the airline in question. In their on-board magazines, most airlines have a route map somewhere to "show off" to potential regular customers where you can fly with them.

– O. R. Mapper
Jun 26 '16 at 22:20










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















15





+500









The interface is a bit inconvenient and it has a limit on the number of routes shown simultaneously, but you can do it on Kayak's list of airlines. Click on an airline and you'll get a map of where it flies. E.g. a map for Easyjet:



enter image description here



You can then filter by a specific city to get a map of which routes are available there, e.g. for Easyjet in Prague:



enter image description here



In addition it's possible to show all direct flights from a given city, but without an airline filter through their Routes page:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

    – SztupY
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:52






  • 3





    I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:57











  • @SztupY post updated to reflect this.

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:59











  • For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

    – Berwyn
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35











  • @Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35


















13














Between the Star Alliance route map, the oneworld route map, and the SkyTeam route map, you can see the vast majority of existing flights. For any given airline, just choose the map corresponding to its alliance. And since most itineraries will have all segments within the same alliance, you probably will need to use only one of these maps.






share|improve this answer


















  • 5





    Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 10:50











  • @mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 5 '16 at 5:48


















11














You could try openflights. I'm not sure if the data is complete, but a map for easyjet:



enter image description here



And Indigo (India LCC):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer


















  • 6





    OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:44


















3














How about the conveniently named http://www.airlineroutemaps.com/, which has an impressive list of over 800 airlines.






share|improve this answer























  • Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

    – Berwyn
    Jul 7 '16 at 18:23











  • I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

    – mts
    Sep 7 '16 at 16:01


















2














I have found Wikipedia a particularly useful resource in this. They usually have a page for say Easyjet destinations and also the pages for airports list where airlines fly from there. It being Wikipedia is not updated automatically but then again, it's Wikipedia so it's reliable... enough.






share|improve this answer























  • That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 4:27











  • Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 8:57










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5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes








5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









15





+500









The interface is a bit inconvenient and it has a limit on the number of routes shown simultaneously, but you can do it on Kayak's list of airlines. Click on an airline and you'll get a map of where it flies. E.g. a map for Easyjet:



enter image description here



You can then filter by a specific city to get a map of which routes are available there, e.g. for Easyjet in Prague:



enter image description here



In addition it's possible to show all direct flights from a given city, but without an airline filter through their Routes page:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

    – SztupY
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:52






  • 3





    I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:57











  • @SztupY post updated to reflect this.

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:59











  • For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

    – Berwyn
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35











  • @Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35















15





+500









The interface is a bit inconvenient and it has a limit on the number of routes shown simultaneously, but you can do it on Kayak's list of airlines. Click on an airline and you'll get a map of where it flies. E.g. a map for Easyjet:



enter image description here



You can then filter by a specific city to get a map of which routes are available there, e.g. for Easyjet in Prague:



enter image description here



In addition it's possible to show all direct flights from a given city, but without an airline filter through their Routes page:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

    – SztupY
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:52






  • 3





    I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:57











  • @SztupY post updated to reflect this.

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:59











  • For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

    – Berwyn
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35











  • @Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35













15





+500







15





+500



15




+500





The interface is a bit inconvenient and it has a limit on the number of routes shown simultaneously, but you can do it on Kayak's list of airlines. Click on an airline and you'll get a map of where it flies. E.g. a map for Easyjet:



enter image description here



You can then filter by a specific city to get a map of which routes are available there, e.g. for Easyjet in Prague:



enter image description here



In addition it's possible to show all direct flights from a given city, but without an airline filter through their Routes page:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer















The interface is a bit inconvenient and it has a limit on the number of routes shown simultaneously, but you can do it on Kayak's list of airlines. Click on an airline and you'll get a map of where it flies. E.g. a map for Easyjet:



enter image description here



You can then filter by a specific city to get a map of which routes are available there, e.g. for Easyjet in Prague:



enter image description here



In addition it's possible to show all direct flights from a given city, but without an airline filter through their Routes page:



enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jul 8 '16 at 8:44

























answered Jun 26 '16 at 19:25









JonathanReezJonathanReez

49.8k41237511




49.8k41237511







  • 2





    This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

    – SztupY
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:52






  • 3





    I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:57











  • @SztupY post updated to reflect this.

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:59











  • For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

    – Berwyn
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35











  • @Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35












  • 2





    This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

    – SztupY
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:52






  • 3





    I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:57











  • @SztupY post updated to reflect this.

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 11:59











  • For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

    – Berwyn
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35











  • @Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 27 '16 at 13:35







2




2





This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

– SztupY
Jun 27 '16 at 11:52





This one is definitely missing quite a few routes EasyJet has to Eastern-Europe

– SztupY
Jun 27 '16 at 11:52




3




3





I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

– mts
Jun 27 '16 at 11:57





I made the same discovery as @SztupY, in the first overview map, at least one connection seems missing. When specifying the destination airport that one would turn up. See e.g. in the example above, there is only one connection to Prague in the first image while there are actually plenty in the second one. I guess there is some sorting algo of most popular routes involved.

– mts
Jun 27 '16 at 11:57













@SztupY post updated to reflect this.

– JonathanReez
Jun 27 '16 at 11:59





@SztupY post updated to reflect this.

– JonathanReez
Jun 27 '16 at 11:59













For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

– Berwyn
Jun 27 '16 at 13:35





For BA it doesn't show SIN-SYD, BAH-DOH or any flights to the Carribbean. Is it really a limit on the number of routes shown or something else?

– Berwyn
Jun 27 '16 at 13:35













@Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

– JonathanReez
Jun 27 '16 at 13:35





@Berwyn I think it shows the top-20 routes

– JonathanReez
Jun 27 '16 at 13:35













13














Between the Star Alliance route map, the oneworld route map, and the SkyTeam route map, you can see the vast majority of existing flights. For any given airline, just choose the map corresponding to its alliance. And since most itineraries will have all segments within the same alliance, you probably will need to use only one of these maps.






share|improve this answer


















  • 5





    Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 10:50











  • @mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 5 '16 at 5:48















13














Between the Star Alliance route map, the oneworld route map, and the SkyTeam route map, you can see the vast majority of existing flights. For any given airline, just choose the map corresponding to its alliance. And since most itineraries will have all segments within the same alliance, you probably will need to use only one of these maps.






share|improve this answer


















  • 5





    Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 10:50











  • @mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 5 '16 at 5:48













13












13








13







Between the Star Alliance route map, the oneworld route map, and the SkyTeam route map, you can see the vast majority of existing flights. For any given airline, just choose the map corresponding to its alliance. And since most itineraries will have all segments within the same alliance, you probably will need to use only one of these maps.






share|improve this answer













Between the Star Alliance route map, the oneworld route map, and the SkyTeam route map, you can see the vast majority of existing flights. For any given airline, just choose the map corresponding to its alliance. And since most itineraries will have all segments within the same alliance, you probably will need to use only one of these maps.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jun 26 '16 at 18:57









Michael HamptonMichael Hampton

37.7k284169




37.7k284169







  • 5





    Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 10:50











  • @mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 5 '16 at 5:48












  • 5





    Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

    – mts
    Jun 27 '16 at 10:50











  • @mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 5 '16 at 5:48







5




5





Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

– mts
Jun 27 '16 at 10:50





Worth pointing out that this only works for airlines that do belong to an alliance, i.e. not for e.g. Ryanair or Easyjet.

– mts
Jun 27 '16 at 10:50













@mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

– Michael Hampton
Aug 5 '16 at 5:48





@mts I wouldn't be caught dead on one of their planes, unless it fell out of the sky on top of me. Maybe that's why I didn't think of them.

– Michael Hampton
Aug 5 '16 at 5:48











11














You could try openflights. I'm not sure if the data is complete, but a map for easyjet:



enter image description here



And Indigo (India LCC):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer


















  • 6





    OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:44















11














You could try openflights. I'm not sure if the data is complete, but a map for easyjet:



enter image description here



And Indigo (India LCC):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer


















  • 6





    OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:44













11












11








11







You could try openflights. I'm not sure if the data is complete, but a map for easyjet:



enter image description here



And Indigo (India LCC):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer













You could try openflights. I'm not sure if the data is complete, but a map for easyjet:



enter image description here



And Indigo (India LCC):



enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jun 26 '16 at 14:28









BerwynBerwyn

26.3k658133




26.3k658133







  • 6





    OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:44












  • 6





    OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

    – JonathanReez
    Jun 26 '16 at 19:44







6




6





OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

– JonathanReez
Jun 26 '16 at 19:44





OpenFlights is outdated, as it shows flights which no longer exist (e.g. PRG-TAS).

– JonathanReez
Jun 26 '16 at 19:44











3














How about the conveniently named http://www.airlineroutemaps.com/, which has an impressive list of over 800 airlines.






share|improve this answer























  • Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

    – Berwyn
    Jul 7 '16 at 18:23











  • I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

    – mts
    Sep 7 '16 at 16:01















3














How about the conveniently named http://www.airlineroutemaps.com/, which has an impressive list of over 800 airlines.






share|improve this answer























  • Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

    – Berwyn
    Jul 7 '16 at 18:23











  • I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

    – mts
    Sep 7 '16 at 16:01













3












3








3







How about the conveniently named http://www.airlineroutemaps.com/, which has an impressive list of over 800 airlines.






share|improve this answer













How about the conveniently named http://www.airlineroutemaps.com/, which has an impressive list of over 800 airlines.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 7 '16 at 18:09









Burhan KhalidBurhan Khalid

36.6k372147




36.6k372147












  • Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

    – Berwyn
    Jul 7 '16 at 18:23











  • I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

    – mts
    Sep 7 '16 at 16:01

















  • Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

    – Berwyn
    Jul 7 '16 at 18:23











  • I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

    – mts
    Sep 7 '16 at 16:01
















Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

– Berwyn
Jul 7 '16 at 18:23





Interesting. I can't see LHR-SJC on BA though.

– Berwyn
Jul 7 '16 at 18:23













I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

– mts
Sep 7 '16 at 16:01





I was about to post this as an answer just to find you already had. +1 then. Maybe worth noting their alleged sources: "Airline route maps presented in this site were mainly gathered from airline websites [...]"

– mts
Sep 7 '16 at 16:01











2














I have found Wikipedia a particularly useful resource in this. They usually have a page for say Easyjet destinations and also the pages for airports list where airlines fly from there. It being Wikipedia is not updated automatically but then again, it's Wikipedia so it's reliable... enough.






share|improve this answer























  • That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 4:27











  • Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 8:57















2














I have found Wikipedia a particularly useful resource in this. They usually have a page for say Easyjet destinations and also the pages for airports list where airlines fly from there. It being Wikipedia is not updated automatically but then again, it's Wikipedia so it's reliable... enough.






share|improve this answer























  • That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 4:27











  • Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 8:57













2












2








2







I have found Wikipedia a particularly useful resource in this. They usually have a page for say Easyjet destinations and also the pages for airports list where airlines fly from there. It being Wikipedia is not updated automatically but then again, it's Wikipedia so it's reliable... enough.






share|improve this answer













I have found Wikipedia a particularly useful resource in this. They usually have a page for say Easyjet destinations and also the pages for airports list where airlines fly from there. It being Wikipedia is not updated automatically but then again, it's Wikipedia so it's reliable... enough.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 8 '16 at 0:04









chxchx

37.9k482188




37.9k482188












  • That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 4:27











  • Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 8:57

















  • That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 4:27











  • Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

    – Berwyn
    Jul 8 '16 at 8:57
















That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

– Berwyn
Jul 8 '16 at 4:27





That's better than I expected. It has the LHR-SJC route which started a month or two ago on BA

– Berwyn
Jul 8 '16 at 4:27













Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

– Berwyn
Jul 8 '16 at 8:57





Actually, as @mts points out, it doesn't have the route, just the destination

– Berwyn
Jul 8 '16 at 8:57

















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