Глоссарий Industry Metrics

Completion Rate

Completion Rate

Definition

Percentage of scheduled flights that actually operate (not cancelled)

Completion Rate, also called completion factor, is the percentage of scheduled flight departures that actually operate as planned rather than being cancelled. It is calculated by dividing the number of flights that depart by the number of flights that were scheduled, expressed as a percentage. An airline that schedules 10,000 flights and cancels 200 of them achieves a completion rate of 98 percent.

What Is Completion Rate?

Completion rate measures the fundamental reliability of an airline's schedule: whether flights actually happen at all, as opposed to how punctual they are when they do operate. A cancelled flight is a more severe service failure than a delayed flight because passengers cannot complete their journeys without rebooking, often at significant cost, inconvenience, and wasted time. Completion rate is closely monitored by regulators, consumer advocacy groups, and financial analysts as an indicator of operational stability, particularly after events like crew shortages, IT outages, or severe weather that stress an airline's ability to maintain its schedule.

How It Works in Practice

Airlines cancel flights for a range of reasons classified into controllable and uncontrollable categories. Controllable cancellations stem from mechanical issues, crew unavailability, or operational decisions to consolidate underperforming loads, while uncontrollable cancellations result from extreme weather, air traffic control restrictions, or airport closures. Revenue management teams sometimes strategically cancel low-load departures and consolidate passengers onto other services, a practice known as "rolling" passengers that improves the economics of remaining flights but reduces the headline completion rate. Airlines must balance the reputational cost of cancellations against the financial cost of operating near-empty aircraft.

Why It Matters

Completion rate failures have cascading effects on both customer experience and airline finances. Each cancellation triggers passenger re-accommodation obligations, potential denied boarding compensation under applicable regulations, hotel and meal vouchers, and the cost of repositioning aircraft and crew to recover the operation. The summer 2022 operational meltdown at multiple US and European carriers, which produced completion rates of 90 to 95 percent at some airlines over extended periods, illustrates how schedule reliability failures generate immediate revenue losses, compensation costs, and lasting reputational damage that suppresses forward bookings.

Key Facts and Figures

  • US major carrier completion rates in normal operating environments exceed 98 percent
  • Southwest Airlines' December 2022 operational disruption saw completion rates fall below 70 percent during the Christmas travel period, resulting in an estimated $800 million to $1 billion in losses
  • The DOT reports monthly completion factor data for US reporting carriers
  • A 1 percent decline in completion rate at a major US carrier may affect 100,000 to 300,000 passengers monthly
  • Weather causes approximately 25 to 35 percent of US airline cancellations
  • EU261 and US DOT consumer protection rules require cash refunds (not just vouchers) for airline-cancelled flights, increasing the financial cost of cancellations for carriers

On-Time Performance (OTP), Fleet Age, Aircraft Utilization, Block Hour, Operating Reliability

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Completion Rate?
Percentage of scheduled flights that actually operate (not cancelled)
Why is Completion Rate important in aviation?
Completion Rate, also called completion factor, is the percentage of scheduled flight departures that actually operate as planned rather than being cancelled. It is calculated by dividing the number of flights that depart by the number of flights that were scheduled, expressed as a percentage.