Iata city code list pdf

Continue Do not confuse with ICAO airport rules. Luggage tag for a flight to Oral Ak Zhol Airport with the IATA airport code URA. The IATA airport code, also known as the IATA location identifier, the IATA drive code, or simply the location identifier,[1] is a three-letter geocode that defines many airports and metropolitan areas around the world as defined by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). The signs displayed on the luggage tags displayed on the airport's departure and writing desks are an example of the way these codes are used. IATA Resolution 763 shall apply to the administration of these codes and shall be managed by the headquarters of the IATA in Montreal. The codes are published every six months in the IATA Airline encoding directory. [2] The IATA also has codes for railway stations and airport handling units. A list of airports sorted by IATA code is available. A list of train station codes is available, which are divided into agreements between airlines and rail lines such as Amtrak, SNCF French Railways and Deutsche Bahn. Many railroad halls have their own list of codes for their stations, such as the Amtrak station code list. List of airports by IATA code: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z See also: IATA and ICAO Code History of airport codes from that convenience, whose practice brought the position of pilots to identify their place in the 1930s. Originally, pilots in the United States used a two-letter code from the National Weather Service (NWS) to identify cities. This system became unmanaging for cities that did not have an NWS tag, and the use of two letters allowed only a few hundred combinations; a three-letter system of airport codes was put in place. This system allowed for 17,576 permutations, assumed that all letters could be used together. [3] Naming conventions mainly airport codes are named after the first three letters of the city in which it is located: ATL in Atlanta, SIN in Singapore, ASU in Asunción, MEX in Mexico City, DEN in Denver; ISTANBUL IST; or a combination of initials, ALA for Almaty (formerly known as Alma-Ata), EWR in Newark, GDL in Guadalajara, JNB in Johannesburg, HKG in Hong Kong, SLC in Salt Lake City and WAW in Warsaw. Some U.S. airports retained their NWS code and simply pasted X at the end, such as LAX in LOS Angeles, PDX in Portland, and PHX in Phoenix. [3] Sometimes the airport code reflects pronunciation instead of spelling, like NAN, which reflects pronunciation Nadi like [nandi] in Fiji, where d occurs as a prenasalized stop [ⁿd]. For some reasons, some airport codes do not fit the standard For example, some airports cross several municipalities or regions, and use codes derived from some of their letters resulting in DFW dallas/Fort Worth, DTW Detroit-Wayne County, LBA Leeds-Bradford (Airport), MSP Minneapolis-Saint Paul and RDU Raleigh-DUrham. Other airports, in particular those serving cities with multiple airports, have codes derived from the name of the airport itself, such as JOHN F. Kennedy of JFK New York or Charles de Gaulle of CDG Paris (see below). In some cases, the code comes from the unofficial name of the airport, such as OGG at Kahului Airport (for local aviation pioneer Jimmy Hogg). Canada's unusual codes – which hardly match any of the usual acronym for the name of the city – such as YUL in Montréal and YEG in Edmonton, come from two-letter codes used to identify weather stations in the 1930s. The letters before the two-letter code are in the following format: Y (meaning yes) if the notification station was located together with the airport. W (means without) if the reporting station was not located with the airport. U if the reporting station were located together with an unadined lighthouse. X if the last two letters of the code had already been exported at another Canadian airport. Z if the resulting code had already been taken at a US airport. Cities with multiple airports in large metropolitan areas, airport codes are often named after the airport itself instead of the city they serve, while another code is reserved that refers to the city itself. For example: Beijing (BJS) – Capital (PEK) and Daxing (PKX). Berlin (BER) – Tegel (TXL) and Schönefeld (SXF) and Berlin Brandenburg Airport under construction (BER). There was also another airport in the city in the past, the Tempelhof (THF), which is now closed. Bucharest (BUH) – Otopeni (OTP) is named after the city of Otopeni, where the airport is located, while the city also has a business airport within the city limits called Băneasa (BBU). Buenos Aires (BUE) – Ezeiza (EZE) is named after the suburb of Ezeiza Partido, where the airport is located, while Aeroparque Jorge Newbery (AEP) is in town. Chicago (CHI) – O'Hare (ORD), named after Orchard Field, the airport's former name Midway (MDW) and Rockford (RFD) (JKT) – Soekarno-Hatta (CGK) is named after Cengkareng, which is an airport, while the city also has another airport, Halim Perdanakusuma (HLP). JKT previously referred to the city's former airport, Airport, which closed in the mid-1980s. London (LON) – Heathrow (LHR), Gatwick (LGW), City (LCY),[3] Stansted (STN), Luton (LTN) and Southend (SEN) Milan (MIL) – Malpensa (MXP)), Linate (LIN) and Orio al Serio (BGY) Montreal (Y MQ) – Trudeau (YUL), Mirabel (YMX) and Saint-Hubert (YHU) Moscow (MOW) – Sheremetyevo Domodedovo (DME), Vnukovo (VKO), Ostafyevo (OSF), Zhukovsky (ZIA) New York York (NYC) – John F. Kennedy (JFK, aiemmin Idlewild (IDL)), LaGuardia (LGA) ja Newark (EWR) Osaka (OSA) – Itami (ITM, aiemmin OSA), Kansai (KIX) ja Kobe (UKB) Pariisi (PAR) – Orly (ORY), Charles de Gaulle (CDG), Le Bourget (LBG) ja Beauvais (BVA) Rio de Janeiro (RIO) – Galeão (GIG) ja Santos Dumont (SDU) Rooma (ROM) – Fiumicino (FCO) ja Ciampino (CIA) São Paulo (SAO) – Congonhas (CGH), Guarulhos (GRU) ja Campinas (VCP) Sapporo (SPK) – Chitose (CTS) ja Okadama (OKD) Soul (SEL) – Incheon (ICN) ja Gimpo (GMP) , aiemmin SEL) Tukholma (STO) – Arlanda (ARN), Bromma (BMA), Nyköping–Skavsta (NYO) ja Västerås (VST) Teneriffa (TCI) – Teneriffa North (TFN) ja Teneriffa South (TFS) Tokyo (TYO) – Haneda (HND), aiemmin TYO) ja Narita (NRT) Toronto (YTO) – Pearson (YYZ), Bishop (YTZ), Hamilton (YHM) ja Waterloo (YKF) Washington, D.C. (WAS) – Dulles (IAD), Reagan (DCA) ja Baltimore–Washington (BWI) tai käyttämällä kaupungin koodia yhdellä suurimmista lentokentistä ja sitten antaa toisen koodin toiselle lentokentälle : Almaty (ALA) – Itse nimetyt (ALA) ja Burundai (BXJ) Bangkok (BKK) – Suvarnabhumi (BKK) ja Don Mueang (DMK, aiemmin BKK) Belfast (BFS) – Itse nimetty (BFS) ja George Best (BHD) Colombo (CMB) – Bandaranaike (CMB) ja Ratmalana (RML) Dakar (DKR) – Senghor (DKR) ja Diass (DSS) Dallas–Fort Worth (DFW) – Itse nimetty (DFW), Love Field (DAL), Meacham (FTW), Alliance (AFW), Addison (ADS) Dubai (DXB) – International (DXB) ja Al Maktoum (DWC) Glasgow (GLA) – International (GLA) ja Prestwick (PIK) Houston (HOU) - Hobby (HOU) ja Intercontinental (IAH) Istanbul ( IST) – Itse nimetty (IST) , Sabiha Gökçen (SAW) ja Atatürk (ISL, aiemmin IST) Johannesburg (JNB) – O. R. Tambo (aiemmin Jan Smuts) (JNB) ja Lanseria (HLA) Kuala Lumpur (KUL) – Sepang (KUL) ja Subang (SZB, aiemmin KUL) Kyiv (IEV) – Zhuliany (IEV) ja Boryspil (KBP) Los Angeles (LAX) – Self nimetyt (LAX), Ontario (ONT), Orange County (SNA), Van Nuys (VNY), Palmdale (PMD), Long Beach (LGB) ja Burbank (BUR) Medellín (MDE) – José María Córdova (MDE) ja Olaya Herrera (EOH) Melbourne (MEL) - Tullamarine (MEL) , Essendon (MEB) ja Avalon (AVV) Miami (MIA) – Itse nimetty (MIA), Fort Lauderdale (FLL), West Palm Beach (PBI) Nagoya (kansalaisjärjestö) – Centrair (kansalaisjärjestö) ja Komaki (NKM), aiemmin kansalaisjärjestö) San Francisco (SFO) – Itse nimetty (SFO), Oakland (OAK), San Jose–Mineta (SJC), Sonoma–Schulz (STS) Seattle (SEA) – Tacoma (Sea–Tac) (SEA) ja Paine Field (PAE) Shanghai (SHA) – Pudong (PVG) ja Hongqiao (SHA) Sydney (SYD) – Kingsford Smith (SYD) ja Nancy-Bird Walton (SWZ) Taipei (TPE) – Taoyuan (aiemmin Chiang Kai-shek) (TPE) ja Songshan (TSA) , aiemmin TPE) Teheran (THR) – Imam Khomeini (IKA) ja Mehrabad (THR) Kun eri samannimisissä kaupungeissa on lentoasema, heille on annettava eri Here are some examples: Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport (BHM) is located in Birmingham, Alabama, usa, and Birmingham Airport (BHX) in Birmingham, England, United Kingdom. Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport (SJC) is located in San Jose, California, U.S., and Juan Santamaría International Airport (SJO) in San Jose, Costa Rica. Portland International Jetport (PWM) is located in Portland, Maine, while Portland International Airport (PDX) is located in Portland, Oregon. Manchester Airport (MAN) is located in Manchester, England, United Kingdom, while Manchester-Boston Regional Airport (MHT) is located in Manchester, New Hampshire, USA. Sometimes a new airport is built to replace the old one, leaving the code of the city's new large airport (or the only airport left) to match the name of the city. The original airport in Nashville, Tennessee, was built in 1936 as part of the Works Progress Administration and called Berry Field as BNA. Known as Nashville International Airport, the new facility was built in 1987 but still uses BNA. This is done in conjunction with rules aimed at avoiding confusion that appears to apply in the United States, stating that the first and second and third letters of the identifier may not be copied by separation of less than 200 nautical miles. [3] Thus, the three airports in the Washington, D.C. area have all completely different codes: IAD for Washington-Dulles, DCA for Washington-Reagan (District of Columbia Airport) and BWI for Baltimore (Baltimore-Washington International, formerly BAL). [3] Since HOU is used at William P. Hobby Airport, the new Houston-Intercontinental became IAH. [3] The code BKK was originally issued to Bangkok-Don Mueang and was later transferred to Suvarnabhumi Airport, while the former DMK was approved. Code ISK was originally issued to Gandhinagar Airport (Nashik Old Airport) and later transferred to Ozar Airport (nashik's current airport). Shanghai-Hongqiao retained the code SHA, while the new Shanghai-Pudong adopted PVG. The opposite is the case in Berlin: Berlin-Tegel Airport uses the code TXL, while its lower counterpart, Berlin-Schönefeld, uses SXF; The airport code for berlin's Brandenburg Airport, which is still opening, is BER, which is also part of its branding. Hamburg (HAM) and Hanover (HAJ) airports are less than 100 nautical miles (190 km) apart and therefore share the same first and middle letters, indicating that this rule can only be followed in Germany. Cities or airports that change the name Many cities retain historical names although they have undergone an official name/spelling/transliteration change: in Armenia: LWN Gyumrille (formerly Leninakan) in Bangladesh: DAC for Dhaka (formerly Dacca) in Canada: YFB for Iqaluit (formerly Frobisher Bay) in China: PEK for Beijing Beijing Beijing), TSN Tianjin (formerly Tientsin), CKG Chongqing (formerly Chungking), NKG Nanjing (formerly Nanking), TAO Qingdao (formerly Tsingtao), CTU Chengdu (formerly Chengtu) and CAN Guangzhou (formerly Canton). Older IATA codes follow the romaisation of china's postal sector, introduced in 1906, officially abolished in 1964 and introduced well into the 1980s, although Pinyin gradually overtakes greenland: most airports, including SFJ Kangerlussuaqille (formerly Søndre Strømfjord) and GoH Nuuk (formerly Godthåb) in India: Mumbai BOM (formerly Bombay), Kolkatan CCU (formerly Calckata) and MAA Chennaille (formerly Madras) in : TKG (formerly Tanjung Karang) , UPG Makassar (formerly Ujung Pandang). Moreover, when the enhanced Indonesian spelling system was introduced in 1972, a few older IATA codes retained the previous spelling: BTJ Banda for Aceh (formerly Banda Atjeh), DJJ Jayapuralle (formerly Djajapura), JOG (formerly Jogjakarta) in Kazakhstan: NQZ For Nur-Sultan (formerly Astana and Tselinograd (TSE),SCO Aktaulle (formerly Shevchenko), GUW Atyraun (formerly Guryev), KOV Kokshetaulle (formerly Kokchetav) , DMB for Taraz (formerly Dzhambyl), PLX for Semey (formerly Semipalatinsk) in Kyrgyzstan: FRU Bishkekille (formerly Frunze) in Moldova : KIV to Chișinău (formerly Kishinev) in Montenegro: TGD to Podgorica (formerly Titograd) in Myanmar: RGN Yangon (formerly Rangoon) in Pakistan: LYP to Faisalabad when the city changed its name from Lyallpur to Faisalabad in honour of King Faisal of Saudi Arabia. In Russia: LED St. St. Petersburg (formerly Leningrad), GOJ Nizhny novgorod (formerly Gorky), SVX yekaterinburg (formerly Sverdlovsk), KUF Samara (formerly Kuybyshev), OGZ Vladikavkaz (formerly Ordzhonikidze) and others in South Africa: NLP for Mbombela (formerly Nelspruit) and PTG for Polokwane (formerly Pietersburg) in Tajikistan: LBD for Khujand (formerly Leninabad) in Turkmenistan: KRW for Türkmenbaşy (formerly Krasnovodsk); for Türkmenabat (formerly Chardzhev) Türkmenabat in Ukraine: IEV in Kiev; VSG for Luhansk (formerly Voroshilovgrad); Kropyvnytskyin KGO (formerly Kirovograd); LWO for Lviv (formerly Lwów, which was part of Poland until 1939 and was still called Lvov in Russian); IFO Ivano- Frankivski (written in Russian as Ivano-Frankovsk in Soviet times); In Vietnam: For the city of SGN Ho Chi Minh (formerly Saigon), some airport codes are based on previous names associated with the current airport, often military heritage. These include: Chicago's O'Hare, who is assigned as AN ORD based on its old name, Orchard Field. It was expanded and renamed O'Hare in the mid-1950s. Fresno Yosemite International Airport uses the code FAT derived from the previous name of the airport air terminal. Orlando International Airport established as Orlando Orlando The #2 but uses mco since he was renamed McCoy Air Force Base in 1959 in honour of the wing commander who crashed in 1958. It was converted in the early 1960s for joint civil and military use and renamed Orlando Jetport at McCoy, then renamed Orlando International Airport in the early 1980s. Other airport codes are inconspicuate in origin, and each has its own peculiarities: Nashville uses BNA under the former name Berry Field, from now on Berry Nashville Airport Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport is for SDF Standiford Field, its original name. Knoxville uses TYS on Charles McGhee Tyson. Donated by the family to the country's first airport in Knoxville Kahului, the main gateway to Maui, uses OGG as a tribute to Hawaiian aviation pioneer Bertram J. Hogg Gold Coast, Australia uses OOL because of its former name Coolangatta Airport, named after a suburb of the Sunshine Coast, Australia uses mcy for former names Maroochydore Airport and Maroochydore-Sunshine Coast Airport. It is actually located in Marcoola and not in Maroochydore in Asia, codes that do not match the names of their city include Niigatan KIJ, Nanchang KHN, Pyongyang FNJ and Koben UKB. Several codes for one airport EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg, which serves three countries, have three airport codes: BSL, MLH, EAP Airport codes using the city's English name Some European cities have a different name in their own language than english, but the airport code represents only the English name. Examples: CGN - Cologne/Cologne (Germany) CPH - Copenhagen/København (Denmark) FLR - Florence/Florence (Italy) GVA - Geneva/Genève (Switzerland) OPO - Oporto/Porto (Portugal) PRG - Prague/Prague (Czech Republic) VCE - Venice/Venezia (Italy) VIE - Vienna/Vienna (Austria) Use in colloquial language Some airports are identified even in colloquial terms by their airport code. The most notable examples are LAX and JFK. [citation required] National Practices U.S. Since the U.S. Navy reserved N-codes and prevent confusion over Federal Communications Commission dispatch invitation signs starting with W and K, certain U.S. cities that start with these letters had to implement irregular airport codes when their airports were opened: EWR for Newark, ORF for Norfolk, Virginia, EYW Key West, Florida, OME Nome and APC napa, California. [3] This practice is not followed outside the United States: Karachi is KHI, Warsaw is WAW and Nagoya is an NGO. Moreover, as radio communications use three letter codes starting with Q widely, cities with the name Q also had to find alternative codes, such as: (NDG), Quetta (UET), Quito (UIO) and Quimper (UIP). [citation required] IATA codes should not be confused with FAAs at US airports. Most FAA identifiers agree with similar IATA codes, but some do not, such as Saipan, whose FAA identifier is GSN and its IATA code is SPN, and some match the IATA codes of airports outside the United States. [citation required] Canada Canada Major Airports have codes that start with the letter Y, although not all Y codes are Canadian (for example, YUM Yumalle, Arizona, and YNT for Yantai, China), and not all Canadian airports start with the letter Y (for example, ZBF bathurst, New Brunswick). Many Canadian airports have code that starts with A, X or Z, but none of these are large airports. When canada's intercontinent railways were built, each station was given its own two-letter Morse code. VR comes from Vancouver, TZ Toronto, QB Quebec, WG Winnipeg, SJ Saint John, YC Calgary, OW Ottawa, EG Edmonton, etc. When the Canadian government set up airports, it also used existing rail rules. If there was a weather station at the airport, the authorities added a code to the front Y, which means yes to indicate that it had a weather station or some other letter indicating that it was not. When international codes were created in cooperation with the United States because Y was rarely used in the United States, Canada simply used the weather station codes at its airports and converted to Y Z if it conflicted with the airport code already in use. The result is that most of Canada's most important airport codes start with a Y, followed by two letters in the name of the city: YOW for Ottawa, YWG for Winnipeg, YYC for Calgary and YVR for Vancouver, while other Canadian airports attach the two-letter code of radio beads closest to the actual airport, such as YQX in Gander and YXS Prince in George. Of the 10 airports in canada's provincial capital, four have ended up with codes starting at YY, including YYZ in Toronto, Ontario, YYJ in Victoria, British Columbia, YYT at St. John's, Newfoundland and YYG in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. Canada's largest airport is YYZ for Toronto-Pearson (YTZ was used at Toronto City Airport, so YYZ is the station code for a village called Malton, where Toronto Pearson International Airport is actually located). The YUL is used in Montréal-Trudeau (UL was the identification code of the lighthouse in the city of Kirkland, which is now the montréal-Trudeau location). While these codes make it difficult for the public to connect with a particular Canadian city, some codes have become popular in use despite their cryptic nature, especially at major airports. The Toronto code has entered pop culture in the form of YYZ, is a song by the rock band Rush that uses the Morse code signal as a musical subject. Some airports have started using IATA-IATA as marketing brands. Calgary International Airport has started using its airport code as the marketing brand and name of the YYC Airport Authority website (yyc.com)[4], while Vancouver International Airport advertises as YVR (yvr.com). New Zealand Numerous Airports in New Zealand use codes with the letter Z to distinguish them from similar airport names in other countries. Examples include HLZ for Hamilton, ZQN for Queenstown and WSZ for Westport. Lack of codes There are several airports with regular services that do not have ICAO codes with IATA codes. For example, several Alaska airports have scheduled a commercial service, such as Stebbins and Nanwalek, which use FAA codes instead. There are also airports with regular flights with ICAO codes, but no IATA codes such as Nkhotakota Airport/Tangole Airport in Malawi or Chōfu Airport in Tokyo, Japan. Russia also has several small airports (e.g. Omsukchan Airport), which instead use russian internal codes for booking. These airports cannot book flights through international flight booking systems or transfer luggage there, so they are booked instead through the airline or domestic booking system. Consequently, neither system fully covers all airports with a regular flight. See also Airline codes Airspace class Computer network naming system, another possible use of IATA airport codes Geocoding ICAO airport code International Air Transport Association Code UN/LOCODE References ^ IATA. IATA - Codes - Airline and Airport Codes Search. www.iata.org. Archived from the original 2008-10-13. Retrieved 2009-09-22. ^ IATA. IATA - Airline encoding directory. www.iata.org. ^ a b c d e f g Airport AB: An Explanation of Airport Identifier Codes. Air line pilot. Air line pilots' association. 1994. Retrieved 6 January 2012. ^ YYC: Calgary Airport Authority. Retrieved March 22, 2015. External links Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Metropolitan Area airport codes. IATA's official website IATA Airline and Airport Code Search United Nations Code for Trade and Transport Locations (UN/LOCODE) – contains IATA codes Airport ABC: An Explanation of Airport Identifier Codes. Air line pilot. Air line pilots' association. December 1994. Airport IATA/ICAO Code Database Search (aeronautical code central website - regular updates) OpenFlights, freely licensed (ODbL) aeronautical dataset Retrieved

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