Flight Friday: Turkish Operators Outpace Eastern Europe Despite Smaller Fleet

turkish airlines a350
Credit: Joe Pries

Ahead of Aviation Week’s MRO BEER event in Istanbul, Flight Friday examines how Eastern European (excluding Russia) operators’ narrowbody and widebody monthly flight cycles compare to Turkish operators.

Eastern European operators operate over 800 narrowbody aircraft and a little under 150 widebody aircraft. Utilization is up for both aircraft classes by over 16% when compared to May 2024, as we move further away from the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war.

This is healthy growth. As for comparison, the global average of narrowbody growth is a little over 1% from May 2024 to May 2026.

Turkish operators have been growing at a fast pace. With a narrowbody fleet of over 600 aircraft, and a widebody fleet of over 180 aircraft, they are operating at similar levels to the whole of Eastern Europe.

The largest disparity is for widebody, but with an in-service fleet that is 50 aircraft higher, it should come as no surprise. Despite having only 50 more aircraft, Turkish operators fly more than double the flights of Eastern European carriers. This reflects how carriers like Turkish Airlines utilize aircraft on shorter, high-frequency routes, while Eastern European operators focus on longer-haul sectors.

For narrowbody cycles, the gap narrows significantly despite differing fleet sizes—Turkish operators trail the larger Eastern European fleet by just 11%.

With both Eastern Europe and Turkey having over 500 aircraft on order, these numbers may remain similar for some time to come.

This data was put together using Aviation Week’s Tracked Aircraft Utilization database.

 

Daniel Williams

Based in the UK, Daniel is Director of Fleet Data Services for Aviation Week Network. Prior to joining Aviation Week in 2017, Daniel held a number of industry positions analyzing fleet data.

FlightFriday

Flight Friday is compiled using data from Aviation Week Intelligence Network’s (AWIN) Tracked Aircraft Utilization module, the most comprehensive and accurate solution for global tracking of aircraft utilization. 

Based on recorded flight movements from ADS-B data, combined with AWIN’s robust fleet intelligence, users gain insight into the aircraft’s actual versus reported movement, down to the tail number. This unique solution provides users a more up-to-date and comprehensive analysis of aircraft utilization.