Quantcast

Where are all remaining Boeing 747-400s still flying today

Airline CEO wants airports to cap passengers at 2 alcoholic drinks to limit on-board disruptions
Emirates Will Buy 5 Airbus A380s From Lessor For $200 Million
Delta Air Lines named official airline of the WNBA
Pair Of C-Suite Officials Depart Wheels Up
LAX Receives Final Cars for People Mover Train
Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines merger clears Justice Department hurdle, now faces DOT
Alaska Airlines flight attendants reject new contract, union says there's 'more work to do'
Elliott Investment To Push For 10 New Boardroom Directors At Southwest Airlines
Alaska Air Backs JetZero Blended-Wing Design
AI in Aviation Line Maintenance: A Strategic Response to Delays, Satisfaction, and Staffing Challenges
Air taxi service plans for 2026 Los Angeles launch at USC, SoFi and LAX
VistaJet Flight Brings Home Americans in Prisoner Swap
Air Canada Blames Paris Olympics On Decreased Profits
Delta passengers sue airline over refund refusals after CrowdStrike meltdown
Microsoft fires back at Delta after massive outage, says airline declined ‘repeated’ offers for help
Korean Air Confirms A Spacious Lounge Is Coming To The New Terminal One at New York JFK
VAS Aero Services to Acquire an Additional 17 Airbus A320 Airframes, Bringing to 23 the Total Number of A320s Slated for Teardown and Harvested Parts Redistribution
Delta CEO says CrowdStrike-Microsoft outage cost the airline $500 million
Boeing Reports $16.9 Billion In Revenue For 2nd Quarter With 5,400 Commercial Aircraft Backlog
United Airlines says flight attendant in Terrell Davis incident is no longer employed and NFL legend’s ‘no fly’ ban is lifted | CNN
Nepal Plane Crash Kills 18 After Takeoff - Airline Ratings
Southwest Airlines is getting rid of open seating | CNN Business
CrowdStrike Outage Caused 10% Spike in Air Charter
Aircraft Engine Maintenance and Repair to Peak in 2026, Worsening Capacity Shortage for Commercial Aviation, Says Bain & Company
Joby’s Electric Air Taxi Makes European Debut
The National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation announces NLRB-scheduled vote to remove union officials
Families recount the horror of MH17 ten years on - Airline Ratings
777-9 Enters Certification Flight Testing - AVweb
Kompass Kapital Sets New Course with Airshare Investment
SATS, SIA Engineering Company and Changi Airport Group to Trial Autonomous Buses at Changi Airport
Where are all remaining Boeing 747-400s still flying today
Policy
Webp a3
CEO Kelly Ortberg | Boeing

The Boeing 747-400, once a leading widebody aircraft for passenger and cargo operations, is now primarily used as a freighter. Originally developed after Boeing's unsuccessful bid to supply the United States Air Force with a large military transport, the commercial version of the 747 first entered service in 1970 with Pan Am. The 747-400 variant, introduced in the late 1980s, became one of the most popular versions due to its updated features such as winglets, improved engines, and advanced avionics.

Production of all Boeing 747 models ended in 2023 after nearly 1,500 units were delivered since its inception. Of these, Boeing built 694 examples of the -400 series. As of early 2025, industry data from ch-aviation shows that there are about 174 active Boeing 747-400s worldwide across various configurations including freighters and combi versions. Planespotters.net lists slightly higher numbers when accounting for parked aircraft and includes other variants like the newer 747-8.

A few major operators account for more than half of all remaining active aircraft. Atlas Air is currently the largest operator of both the Boeing 747 overall and specifically the -400 variant. According to Planespotters.net, Atlas Air has a fleet comprising around 48 Boeing 747-400s (including Dreamlifters) and operates a total of about 61 Jumbos when factoring in other variants. The company stated: "Our companies operate the world’s largest fleet of 747 freighter aircraft and provide customers the broadest array of Boeing 747, 777, 767 and 737 aircraft for domestic, regional and international cargo and passenger operations." Atlas Air further reported: "in 2024, we expanded our fleet with three additional Boeing 747-8 freighters." It also added two new Boeing 777s and four more -400Fs during that year.

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

Other notable operators include Kalitta Air—with between seventeen to twenty-two active units depending on source—and UPS Airlines. UPS’s own statements from their annual report indicate they had eleven Boeing 747-400Fs and two converted -400BCFs operating in their global network by late last year.

While most remaining airframes serve as freighters or have been converted from retired passenger jets into cargo roles, only three airlines continue scheduled passenger flights using this model: Lufthansa (with seven active), Russia’s Rossiya Airlines (two reactivated out of five due to sanctions), and Air China (which is phasing out its last units). These fleets are aging; Rossiya’s average unit age is over twenty-five years.

Lufthansa plans to retire its remaining eight (seven operational) by no later than 2028 as it modernizes its long-haul fleet. Non-scheduled charter services—such as those offered by Atlas Air—will keep some examples flying beyond that date. Cargo operations using this model are expected to persist until at least mid-century.

The exact number of active aircraft fluctuates due to ongoing maintenance cycles or retirements among smaller carriers globally. Many smaller cargo operators collectively account for up to one hundred twenty additional airframes but typically run just one or a handful each.

Despite no longer being produced or widely flown by passengers, the enduring utility of the Boeing 747-400 as a dedicated cargo jet continues its legacy well into its fifth decade since introduction.

Organizations Included in this History
More News

Delta Air Lines will introduce new in-flight menu options created by celebrity chef José Andrés starting November 4.

Oct 25, 2025

The Blue Sky partnership between United Airlines and JetBlue launched today, allowing members of both airlines’ loyalty programs to earn and redeem points across the two carriers.

Oct 25, 2025

Air Canada is set to expand its presence at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport (YTZ) by introducing four new nonstop routes to the United States in 2026.

Oct 25, 2025

United Airlines has announced it will add 10 new destinations from its Chicago O'Hare International Airport hub starting next year.

Oct 25, 2025

The partnership between United Airlines and JetBlue, known as Blue Sky, has officially launched.

Oct 25, 2025

American Airlines will introduce its new Airbus A321XLR aircraft on December 18, marking the first time a U.S. airline operates this model.

Oct 25, 2025