In September 2025, the Boeing 747 continues to see limited passenger service to the United States as airlines transition to more fuel-efficient aircraft. Data from aviation analytics company Cirium shows that only 625 flights using Boeing 747s are scheduled to arrive in the US this month. These flights are operated by three carriers: Lufthansa, Air China, and Korean Air.
Lufthansa operates the largest number of Boeing 747 routes to the US. The German airline serves eight destinations—Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD), New York John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), Miami International Airport (MIA), Chicago O’Hare International Airport (ORD), San Francisco International Airport (SFO), and Houston George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH)—all departing from its main hub at Frankfurt Airport (FRA). Each route has 60 round-trip flights scheduled for September.
The airline’s current fleet includes 19 Boeing 747-8s and eight Boeing 747-400s. According to ch-aviation data, these aircraft have average ages of 11.9 years and 25.5 years, respectively. The Lufthansa 747-8 is configured with four classes: eight first class seats, 80 business class seats, 32 premium economy seats, and 244 economy seats. The older 747-400s accommodate up to 371 passengers in a three-class layout.