These sparsely populated flights are a fascinating logistical quirk of the airline industry, driven by routing necessities and strict regulatory rules rather than passenger demand.
Airlines operate near-empty flights for a few specific reasons. The most common is the repositioning flight. An aircraft might need to move from Chicago to Dallas late at night to operate a fully booked morning route out of Texas. Even if only four people buy tickets for the late-night run, the plane must go anyway to ensure the morning schedule runs smoothly.
Another reason involves "ghost flights." At highly congested, heavily regulated airports like London Heathrow or JFK, airlines are granted specific takeoff and landing slots. Under standard "use it or lose it" rules, airlines must operate flights in their allocated slots a certain percentage of the time (historically 80%). If they fail to meet this threshold, they forfeit the slot to a competitor. To protect these slots—which can be worth tens of millions of dollars—airlines will sometimes fly massive jets with almost no one on board just to fulfill the quota.
Finding yourself on one of these flights comes with distinct advantages and a few surprising drawbacks.
The Pros:
- Unrivaled comfort: Passengers can easily claim an entire row, lifting the armrests to create a makeshift bed. It is essentially a free upgrade to a lie-flat experience.
- Exceptional service: With only a handful of passengers, flight attendants have virtually no workload. This often translates to highly attentive service, extra snacks, and a relaxed, conversational atmosphere.
- Efficiency: Boarding takes minutes, there is zero fight for overhead bin space, and deplaning is instantaneous.
The Cons:
- Cancellation risk: If the empty flight is not strictly necessary for repositioning or slot-hoarding, airlines may simply cancel it to save on fuel and crew costs, consolidating the few ticketed passengers onto a later departure.
- Chilly cabins: Commercial aircraft environmental control systems are calibrated to account for the body heat generated by hundreds of people. Without that collective thermal mass, the cabin can become noticeably cold during the flight.
- Weight and balance delays: Airplanes require a precise center of gravity to fly safely. On an empty flight, the flight crew may mandate that the few passengers sit in very specific rows to balance the aircraft. In extreme cases, ground crews might even have to load heavy ballast bags into the cargo hold before the plane is legally allowed to take off, potentially delaying the departure.