Short-Haul Flight
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Short-Haul Flight
Definition
Flight under 1,500 km, typically 1-3 hours duration
A short-haul flight is an air service covering a distance of approximately 1,500 kilometers or less, or with a flight duration under three hours. Short-haul routes form the dense, high-frequency fabric of regional aviation networks and are the primary domain of narrow-body aircraft and low-cost carriers.
What Is a Short-Haul Flight?
The definition of short-haul varies slightly by region and context, but the common industry benchmark is approximately 1,500 km or three hours of flight time. Within these parameters fall most European intra-continental routes, US domestic routes east of the Mississippi River, domestic routes within large countries like China, India, and Brazil, and regional connections throughout Southeast Asia. Short-haul flying is characterized by high frequency, competitive pricing, and intense substitutability with surface transport on the shortest segments.
How It Works in Practice
Short-haul aircraft — typically the Airbus A320 family or Boeing 737 family — dominate these routes. Their economics favor quick turnarounds (often 25 to 30 minutes at low-cost carriers), high daily utilization (sometimes 12 or more flight hours per day), and minimal crew rest requirements. On routes under two hours, airlines minimize or eliminate catering to cut costs. Ryanair's core network of European short-haul routes, including London Stansted to Dublin or Rome Ciampino, exemplifies the model: cheap fares, fast turns, secondary airports, unbundled ancillaries. Within Asia, carriers like IndiGo in India or AirAsia across Southeast Asia have built massive short-haul networks serving hundreds of city pairs.
Why It Matters
Short-haul flying represents the majority of global flight operations by number of departures, even though medium- and long-haul routes generate more revenue per flight. Short-haul routes face increasing competitive pressure from high-speed rail on segments under 600 km, and are under regulatory scrutiny in several European countries considering restrictions on short routes where rail alternatives exist.
Key Facts and Figures
- The busiest short-haul route in the world by passenger volume is typically Jeju to Seoul Gimpo in South Korea, with over 13 million annual passengers
- Aircraft on short-haul routes may complete 6 to 8 roundtrips per day
- Fuel burn per seat-kilometer on short-haul routes is higher than medium- or long-haul due to the disproportionate fuel cost of takeoff and climb
- Ancillary revenue (baggage fees, seat selection) can represent 40 to 50 percent of low-cost carrier revenue on short-haul routes
Related Concepts
Medium-Haul Flight, Long-Haul Flight, Feeder Route, Narrow-Body Aircraft, Low-Cost Carrier
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Short-Haul Flight?
Why is Short-Haul Flight important in aviation?
Route & Network
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