Flight Time Calculator
Calculate flight time between any two airports using IATA codes, Haversine distance, and average cruise speed. Results in km, miles, and nautical miles — all free.
Estimated Flight Time
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Kilometers
Miles
Nautical Miles
- Pure flight time (cruise)
- Ground buffer (taxi + takeoff + landing)
- 30 minutes
- Total block time
- Average cruise speed
- 800 km/h (432 kt)
About Flight Time Estimation
Flight time between two airports is not a single constant — it is the outcome of several physical and operational factors stacked on top of the great-circle distance. The calculator here starts from the Haversine formula, which gives the shortest path over Earth's curved surface between two points expressed as latitude and longitude. That shortest path is divided by 800 km/h, a representative cruise speed for modern commercial twinjets such as the Boeing 737, Airbus A320, Boeing 777, and Airbus A350.
The 30-minute ground buffer accounts for the parts of the journey that are not cruise: pushback, taxi out, holding short of the runway, takeoff roll, initial climb, descent, final approach, landing, and taxi in. On a short hop between two nearby regional airports, these phases can represent nearly half of the total block time; on a long-haul flight, they shrink to a small fraction.
Wind is the largest uncontrolled variable. The jet stream blows at 150 to 300 km/h from west to east at cruise altitude and can shorten an eastbound transoceanic flight by an hour or add an hour to the same route westbound. Airlines build this asymmetry into their published schedules, which is why London to New York is typically scheduled for about an hour longer than New York to London despite the identical distance. Other factors — air traffic routing, runway congestion, seasonal weather deviations, and aircraft type — typically change the real block time by 5 to 15 minutes on top of the Haversine estimate.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the calculator use 800 km/h as the average speed?
What is the difference between great-circle distance and ground track?
How does the jet stream affect real flight times?
Why does my airline schedule differ from this estimate?
Is the calculator accurate for short-haul versus long-haul flights?
Methodology
Flight time is computed from first principles: great-circle distance via the Haversine formula, divided by an average commercial cruise speed of 800 km/h (432 knots). A fixed 30-minute ground buffer is added for taxi out, takeoff, climb, descent, and taxi in. This matches how airlines report block time and is accurate to within roughly 10 percent for most short-, medium-, and long-haul flights. Real-world results vary with aircraft type, wind (especially the jet stream), air traffic control routing, and runway configurations at either end.