Airport specific flight schedules?
April 6, 2010 12:00 PM   Subscribe

I looking for a way to find all the commercial airline flights in or out of a specific airport in the US, regardless of where they are flying from or to.

Some, but not all, smaller airports publish such schedules on their websites but they are frequently out of date. The flight booking sites should have this data, but I haven't found one that lets you do such a search. This comes up for me on a regular basis, but the particular airport I am trying to get this for today is Meridian, MS (MEI). Any suggestions?
posted by cosmac to Travel & Transportation (9 answers total)
 
Best answer: OAG provides this, but it is a pay service.
posted by caddis at 12:10 PM on April 6, 2010


You mean KMEI? Try FlightAware. Here.
posted by vacapinta at 12:11 PM on April 6, 2010


I like Flightstats for this.
posted by cabingirl at 12:19 PM on April 6, 2010


FlightStats
posted by jckll at 12:23 PM on April 6, 2010


Best answer: Wikipedia says only Delta Connection serves MEI. Try the Delta website.
posted by mdonley at 12:26 PM on April 6, 2010


Response by poster: Just to be clear, I'm looking for flight schedules, not current flights. I don't see how to look at the schedule for a future date on either FlightStats or FlightAware (looks like FlightAware does go a couple days out)..

I can't search on the Delta site (it requires you specify both departure and arrival airports). I can download the flight schedules from Delta as a PDF and figure it out from there. But this is tedious and only possible when you know all the airlines serving the airport in question.

Looks like OAG will do it, for $219/yr. Yikes!
posted by cosmac at 1:00 PM on April 6, 2010


Not only does only Delta serve MEI, they only fly to Atlanta.

If you searched Delta for the ATL-MEI flights, you'd get a schedule of all regular commercial service in Meridian.
posted by hwyengr at 1:42 PM on April 6, 2010


I am told that OAG has an exclusive with the arilines and that is why this stuff is not available for free. Some libraries carry it and all travel agents will have it. There is a similar service from American Express - the Executive Travel Sky Guide, which must have a license from OAG or something. I have never used that one so I don't know how it compares to the thoroughness of OAG but you can get a two month free trial.
posted by caddis at 2:37 PM on April 6, 2010


This might help: http://arm.64hosts.com/

It is a program to download. Click on a city and it shows which airlines connect it to which cities.

It's pretty incredible to see all the flights worldwide on one map.
posted by bagels at 8:18 PM on April 6, 2010


« Older It's no use carrying an umbrella if your shoes are...   |   How can Canadians capitalize on the high Canadian... Newer »
This thread is closed to new comments.