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How do I find my 13 digit flight number?

The ticket number is a 13-digit number that you will find on your passenger receipt as well as on your boarding pass.



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If you use the internet and book a trip online, you will receive the most important documents by e-mail. In addition to the payment and booking confirmation, this also includes the so-called e-ticket, which is a digital ticket for check-in. It also contains the flight number.

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In the aviation industry, a flight number or flight designator is a code for an airline service consisting of two-character airline designator and a 1 to 4 digit number.

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Each flight has a unique flight number. There will never be 2 flights from the same airline with the same number in the air at one time. Some numbers are used more than once during the day though, but rarely on the same city pair as that can cause confusion.

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3 Answers. The eTicket number (which is exactly the same as a paper ticket number) is your actual travel document's identifier. The ticket number is determined by the airline that tickets your trip (not the travel agent) and is used to track finances through the various airline reporting agencies.

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You will receive your e-ticket in PDF form or stored in an online ticketing system. A ticket number is a 13-digit number. The first three numbers identify the airline which issued your ticket.

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If you prefer, 24 hours before your flight, you can check-in online using your confirmation or ticket number from your e-ticket receipt on the airline's official website, and if you choose, print your boarding passes, send scannable copies to your smartphone, or both.

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In accordance with the underlying statutory framework (49 USC Chapter 441) and as described in the applicable SORN, the information maintained in the aircraft record is available to the public upon request.

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Could someone call the airline and find out whether or not I boarded the flight in question, using name/confirmation number? The answer is no, airline staff are not permitted to divulge who is or isn't on a flight to members of the public.

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Your record locator, or confirmation code, is a 6-letter code included on your boarding pass and confirmation email. Check your email for your 13-digit Trip Credit or ticket number that begins with '00115' or '0012'.

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Your record locator, or confirmation code, is a 6-letter code included on your boarding pass and confirmation email. Check your email for your 13-digit Trip Credit or ticket number that begins with '00115' or '0012'.

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Each line on an FIDS indicates a different flight number accompanied by:
  1. the airline name/logo and/or its IATA or ICAO airline designator (can also include names/logos of interlining/codesharing airlines or partner airlines, e.g. HX252/BR2898.)
  2. the city of origin or destination, and any intermediate points.


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Airlines can schedule multiple flights with the same flight number on the same day (sometimes on the same route and sometimes on different flight segments). This varies by carrier.

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