Reference

Airport Codes Reference

A quick-reference table for major airport IATA codes. This page is useful when comparing routes, reading fare rules, checking booking results, or understanding which airport a city pair actually refers to.

IATA codeAirportCityCountryNote
ATLHartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International AirportAtlantaUnited StatesMajor domestic and international hub.
JFKJohn F. Kennedy International AirportNew York CityUnited StatesLong-haul gateway; one of several New York airports.
LAXLos Angeles International AirportLos AngelesUnited StatesMajor Pacific gateway.
ORDO’Hare International AirportChicagoUnited StatesLarge U.S. hub with strong domestic reach.
YYZToronto Pearson International AirportTorontoCanadaCanada’s busiest airport.
YVRVancouver International AirportVancouverCanadaMajor Asia-Pacific gateway for Canada.
MEXMexico City International AirportMexico CityMexicoPrimary airport serving Mexico’s capital region.
LHRLondon Heathrow AirportLondonUnited KingdomMajor long-haul hub.
LGWLondon Gatwick AirportLondonUnited KingdomSecondary London airport with strong leisure network.
CDGParis Charles de Gaulle AirportParisFrancePrimary long-haul airport for Paris.
FRAFrankfurt AirportFrankfurtGermanyMajor Star Alliance hub.
AMSAmsterdam Airport SchipholAmsterdamNetherlandsWell-known European transfer airport.
MADAdolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas AirportMadridSpainMain gateway for Spain and Iberia network.
ISTIstanbul AirportIstanbulTurkeyLarge bridge hub across regions.
DXBDubai International AirportDubaiUnited Arab EmiratesGlobal transfer hub.
DOHHamad International AirportDohaQatarMajor long-haul connector.
SINSingapore Changi AirportSingaporeSingaporeLeading Southeast Asian hub.
HNDTokyo Haneda AirportTokyoJapanKey airport close to central Tokyo.
ICNIncheon International AirportSeoulSouth KoreaPrimary long-haul airport for South Korea.
SYDSydney AirportSydneyAustraliaMain international gateway for Sydney.
Why this page matters

Designed for quick comparison

Airport codes appear everywhere in booking flows, trip alerts, and route maps. A clean code reference reduces confusion, especially in cities with multiple airports or when comparing fares across nearby hubs.

How to use this page

Decode booking results quickly

Use this page when a fare search shows unfamiliar codes, when a city has multiple airports, or when you want to confirm whether a route uses the airport you expect.