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What are the flight details?

Flight Details, also known as Flight Service or In-Flight Services, returns scheduled flight information, including origin, destination, departure time, arrival time, flight time, travel time, meals, and additional information.



As an AI, I do not have access to your personal travel bookings, real-time airline ticket databases, or specific flight itineraries unless you explicitly share that information with me by uploading a document or linking your account. Flight details typically encompass several critical data points, including the Flight Number (e.g., AA123), the Departure and Arrival Airports (identified by three-letter IATA codes like LHR or JFK), and the scheduled Departure and Arrival Times. Additionally, a full itinerary would specify your Booking Reference (PNR), seat assignments, baggage allowance, and the specific aircraft type (such as a Boeing 787 Dreamliner). In 2026, many passengers find their flight details most easily by using the airline's official mobile app or a travel aggregator like TripIt, which automatically organizes multi-leg journeys. If you have a specific flight you are inquiring about, please provide the flight number and date so I can look up its current status, gate info, and expected delays for you using real-time flight tracking data.

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Go to your respective airline's website. Select the Edit/Manage Booking option. Enter your PNR or Booking Reference number and email or last name. Hit the “Get Itinerary” button.

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Flight and passenger details
  1. Trip details.
  2. Personal information ? Full names (to be spelled exactly as it is in your ID or passport), date of birth, country of residence.
  3. ID number.
  4. Ideal departure times and length of flights (do you prefer a direct flight or are you happy with connections?)
  5. Preferred cabin class.


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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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It is confidential information so most airlines will not disclose it to anyone. But, if you've booked a ticket for a family then you can call on customer care number and they can confirm it whether the passenger is boarded or not. Originally Answered: Can I find out if someone boards a flight?

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If used skillfully, these small details could lead to even larger headaches for travelers, like identity fraud. “It's good information that could be used in any type of identity theft or a targeted hack,” Fitzgerald says.

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Call the airline. They should be able to find your reservation by your name and travel dates. Usually your name and specific flight and date are needed. In my experience, the city pair should be sufficient, unless your name is very common.

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Aside from military and government sensitive flights, flight information collected by the FAA is considered public information because taxpayers pay for air traffic controllers, runways, towers, and other resources utilized by both commercial and private pilots.

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No. Only way somebody else can check your reservation is if that person knew your name, flight number and the reservation code. Even then, they would not know if you boarded the flight. No airline will give out the passenger list of a given flight.

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3. Time is expressed continuously from 00.00 midnight to 24:00. The 24-hour clock is used for railways and airlines.

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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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There are a few standardized rules when it comes to numbering flights. For flights operating at the same time, numbers can't be repeated. Also, numbers must not exceed four digits. With a few exceptions, flights are usually numbered based on their direction of travel.

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