Singapore Airlines carried nearly 1.8 million passengers in April 2023, based on the carrier’s results for the month. Although it has taken over the operations of narrowbody Silk Air, traffic was about 20% lower than what the pair had in the identical month in 2019. In April 2023, Singapore Airlines filled a median of 87.5% of its seats, nearly five percentage points higher than the duo had 4 years ago.
Singapore Airlines in June
This June, the Star Alliance member might be the fifth-largest airline serving Southeast Asia. Cirium shows that it has roughly 2.2 million seats on the market (excluding lower-cost carrier Scoot), surpassed only by Lion Air, Vietnam Airlines, Vietjet, and AirAsia Malaysia.
Photo: Seven43 | Shutterstock.
In fact, these carriers revolve around their domestic markets, which Singapore Airlines doesn’t have. When that is stripped out, Singapore Airlines itself is by far the leading international operator within the region.
Evaluation of Cirium data shows that its international operation is greater than three-quarters larger than number two, AirAsia Malaysia, and two and a half times greater than the following full-frills carrier, Thai Airways.
While Singapore Airlines is near to recovering June 2019 capability (-3.2%), it stays down significantly if SilkAir is added (-21%). Nonetheless, it’s stronger than other many other players, including Thai Airways (-49%).
936 weekly flights in June
Singapore Airlines has filed 936 weekly departing passenger flights from its Changi hub this June (double for each ways). Again excluding Scoot, it’ll have 31% of flights from the Southeast Asia airport, the third-busiest within the region.
Photo: Steve Worner I Shutterstock.
Using the A350-900, A380, 737-800, 737 MAX 8, 777-300ER, and 787-10, Singapore Airlines’ June passenger network comprises 73 destinations. In comparison with Singapore/Silk Air’s network in June 2019, it has reduced from 97. Nevertheless, some at the moment are served by Scoot, while others return later this 12 months.
Stay aware: Join for my weekly recent routes newsletter.
33 countries in June; Australia is #1
This June, Singapore Airlines serves 33 countries in Africa, wider Asia, Australasia, Europe, the Middle East, and North America. With 111 weekly departures, it has more flights to Australia than anywhere else, then Indonesia (105), India (96), Malaysia (83), and Thailand (63).
Click here for Singapore-Sydney flights.
Photo: Kittikun Yoksap I Shutterstock.
The above five countries account for nearly half of its operation (48%). In contrast, with three weekly A350-900 flights to Vancouver, Canada is its least-served nation. The long 7,967-mile (12,821 km) route, launched through the pandemic, ends in September.
73 destinations: a breakdown
Based on the week of June Twenty second-Twenty eighth, Singapore Airlines’ has passenger flights to those places:
Flights |
Singapore to… |
---|---|
55 weekly |
Kuala Lumpur |
Six every day |
Jakarta |
Five every day |
Bangkok, Denpasar Bali |
4 every day |
London Heathrow, Manila, Melbourne, Penang, Phuket, Seoul Incheon, Sydney |
Triple every day |
Brisbane, Hong Kong, Perth, Phnom Penh, Shanghai Pudong |
19 weekly |
Ho Chi Minh City |
17 weekly |
Chennai, Frankfurt, Los Angeles& |
16 weekly |
Bengaluru, Mumbai |
Double every day |
Beijing Capital, Delhi, Hanoi, Kochi, Male, Medan, Recent York JFK&, Osaka Kansai, San Francisco, Surabaya, Taipei, Tokyo Haneda, Tokyo Narita |
10 weekly |
Paris CDG, Siem Reap |
Every day |
Adelaide, Auckland, Amsterdam, Cape Town*, Cebu^, Christchurch, Danang, Dhaka, Davao, Dubai, Guangzhou, Hyderabad, Johannesburg, Kathmandu, Kolkata, Milan Malpensa, Munich, Newark, Yangon, Zurich |
Sub-daily |
Ahmedabad, Bandar, Barcelona*, Cairns, Chengdu Tianfu, Colombo, Copenhagen, Darwin, Fukuoka, Houston*, Istanbul, Manchester, Nagoya, Rome Fiumicino, Seattle, Vancouver |
& Non-stop and one-stop; * one-stop in each directions; ^ one-stop in a single direction (triangular routing) |
Will you be flying Singapore Airlines in June? If that’s the case, tell us where you are going by commenting.