RASK
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RASK
Definition
Revenue per Available Seat Kilometer — measures unit revenue
Revenue per Available Seat Kilometer (RASK) is the unit revenue metric that measures how much total revenue an airline generates for each seat-kilometer of capacity it deploys. It is calculated by dividing total operating revenue by total Available Seat Kilometers (ASK). An airline generating $11 billion in revenue across 125 billion ASKs has a RASK of 8.8 cents.
What Is Revenue per Available Seat Kilometer (RASK)?
RASK captures the totality of an airline's revenue-generating ability per unit of capacity, encompassing not just ticket sales but also ancillary revenues such as baggage fees, seat upgrades, in-flight purchases, and cargo income when reported in blended form. Some carriers also compute a passenger-only RASK (sometimes called PRASM in the US market, where the unit is the seat mile rather than the seat kilometer) to isolate fare revenue from other income streams. RASK is the essential counterpart to CASK: together they define whether an airline's business model generates a profit or a loss at the system level.
How It Works in Practice
RASK is driven by two interacting forces: load factor and yield. A high RASK can be achieved by filling a large share of seats at moderate fares, or by selling fewer seats at very high fares, or some combination. Revenue management systems are continuously optimizing the mix of fare classes, booking windows, and route-level inventory controls to maximize RASK rather than simply maximizing either load factor or yield in isolation. Ancillary revenue has become an increasingly significant component of RASK: ultra-low-cost carriers often generate 40 to 50 percent of their RASK from fees and add-ons rather than base fares.
Why It Matters
The gap between RASK and CASK is the simplest expression of airline financial health. When RASK exceeds CASK, the airline is profitable on a per-unit basis; when CASK exceeds RASK, it is losing money. Airlines operating in competitive markets face constant pressure on RASK from fare competition, while simultaneously managing CASK through operational efficiency. RASK trends over time signal whether an airline is gaining or losing pricing power in its markets and whether revenue diversification strategies such as premium cabin upgrades or loyalty partnerships are succeeding.
Key Facts and Figures
- US legacy carrier RASK typically ranges from 15 to 19 US cents in recent years
- Low-cost carrier RASK generally falls in the 9 to 13 US cent range
- Ancillary revenues account for approximately 15 to 20 percent of RASK for most US carriers and up to 50 percent for ultra-low-cost carriers
- International RASK is typically lower than domestic RASK in dollar terms due to longer stage lengths diluting per-kilometer revenue
- RASK declined sharply during COVID-19 as airlines flew at low load factors and offered steep discounts to stimulate travel
- Premium cabin revenues (business and first class) contribute disproportionately to RASK on transoceanic routes
Related Concepts
Cost per Available Seat Kilometer (CASK), Yield per RPK, Load Factor, Passenger Revenue, Ancillary Revenue
Frequently Asked Questions
What is RASK (RASK)?
What does RASK stand for?
Why is RASK (RASK) important in aviation?
Industry Metrics
- Revenue Passenger Kilometer (RPK)
- Available Seat Kilometer (ASK)
- Load Factor (LF)
- Yield per RPK
- Yield (Airline)
- CASK (CASK)
- On-Time Performance (OTP)
- Completion Rate
- Operating Margin
- Fleet Utilization
- Fleet Age
- Break-Even Load Factor (BLF)
- Passenger Count (PAX)
- Route Profitability
- Aircraft Turnaround Rate
- Break-Even Load Factor (BELF)
- Market Share
- Passenger Revenue
- Passenger Revenue per ASM (PRASM)
- Stage Length
- Cost per Block Hour
- Fuel Cost per ASM
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