Not so long after the Wright brothers’ first flight on the beaches of Kitty Hawk in 1903, commercial airlines began forming around the world. The very first would be over 100 years old now — if they were still around. However, there are some airlines still flying today that are well into their 90s and going strong.
Pinpointing which airlines are among the world’s oldest is a little trickier than it sounds. For instance, a German airline called Lufthansa was founded in 1926, but was dissolved by the Allies in 1951. A completely new airline founded in 1953 resurrected the name, livery and logo. Despite that, Lufthansa unfortunately does not make this list since the new airline and the old were separate entities.
By contrast, the airline we now know as Delta was called Huff Daland Dusters when it was founded in 1924 and renamed in 1928. Because it was the same airline, it does make the list. We are only counting airlines whose original or main component is the airline that you can still fly today. We’re also only including (mostly) major international airlines. Sorry, Grand Canyon Airlines, founded 1927.
With all that in mind, here are the grande dames of the sky. How many have you flown?
Courtesy of Finnair
6. Finnair
Founding date: November 1, 1923
Country:Â Finland
Call sign:Â AY
Called Aero when it was founded back in 1923, Finnair’s first aircraft was a German Junkers F13 seaplane. Its skis allowed it to float on water or land or ice since, at the time the airline began flying in 1924, there were no commercial airfields in Finland. The airline’s final seaplane flight took place in December 1936, from which point all flights took off and landed on solid ground, which seems a pity. Finnair was the first western airline to operate regular flights to the U.S.S.R. after World War II, and the first to offer flights from Western Europe to Mainland China starting in 1988. The airline officially changed its name to Finnair in 1968 and joined the Oneworld alliance in 1997. Today, Finnair flies to over 130 destinations and has over 60 aircraft.
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5. Czech Airlines
Founding date:Â October 6, 1923
Country:Â Czech Republic
Call sign:Â OK
The name Czech Airlines only dates to May 1995, but the company was originally called Czechoslovak State Airlines, or CSA, when it was founded back in the 1920s. The carrier’s first flight took place from Prague to Bratislava on October 29, 1923, and the airline grew from there until March 1939, when it ceased operations until September 1945 due to World War II. Czech Airlines became a member of SkyTeam in 2001.
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4. Aeroflot
Founding date:Â March 17, 1923
Country:Â Russia
Call sign:Â SU
Originally founded as Dobrolyot, the airline changed its name to Aeroflot in 1932. Aeroflot became one of the world’s largest airlines during the Soviet era, when it was the flag carrier of the U.S.S.R. Though it is now semi-privatized, a majority of the company is still owned by the Russian government, making it the de facto state airline of Russia. It became a member of the SkyTeam alliance in 2006 and currently has a fleet of over 200 planes flying to more than 120 destinations.
Courtesy of Qantas
3. Qantas
Founding date:Â November 16, 1920
Country:Â Australia
Call sign:Â QF
Ever wonder where the word Qantas came from? It’s an acronym for the airline’s original name: Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Ltd. The airline adopted its famous kangaroo logo, of which there have been many iterations since, in 1944. Qantas introduced the world’s first business class aboard the Boeing 747 in 1979. An upcoming milestone for the airline? Non-stop flights from Perth to London launching in March aboard the airline’s new Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners, which will mark the first regularly scheduled non-stop commercial service between Australia and Europe.
Courtesy of Avianca
2. Avianca
Founding date:Â December 5, 1919
Country:Â Colombia
Call sign:Â AV
It might surprise some to learn that the world’s second-oldest airline is actually Colombia’s Avianca. It was founded as SCADTA, or Sociedad Colombo Alemana de Transporte AĂ©reo and its first flight was from Barranquilla to Puerto Berrio in September 1920. The airline changed its name to Avianca – an acronym of AerovĂas Nacionales de Colombia – in 1940 when it merged with another acronymized airline named SACO (Servicio AĂ©reo Colombiano) and its German backers were forced to divest due to World War II. Avianca now includes subsidiaries in several Latin American countries and merged with the Salvadoran carrier TACA, which itself was founded in 1931, in 2009. The combined airline became a member of the Star Alliance in 2012
Courtesy of KLM
1. KLM
Founding date:Â October 7, 1919
Country:Â Netherlands
Call sign:Â KL
With a tongue-twister like Koninklijke Luchtvaart Maatschappij for a name, no wonder everyone shortens this airline’s name to KLM. The translation from Dutch is the Royal Aviation Company, and it is the oldest existing airline in the world. Its first flight ever was aboard a De Havilland DH-16 piloted by Captain Jerry Shaw between Amsterdam Schipol and London in 1920, and its first transatlantic flight took place in 1934 from Amsterdam to Curaçao. Today, the airline has a fleet of 200 planes and carries over 30 million passengers per year.
Source:Â travelandleisure.com