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What Major Airlines Are Not Members Of IATA...  
User currently offlineJAL777 From , joined today!, posts, RR:
Posted (4 years 11 months 6 days 7 hours ago) and read 561 times:

...and what does this mean techincally speaking?

I notice JetBlue and Southwest aren't members.

4 replies: All unread, jump to last
 
User currently offlineSAA-SAL From Belgium, joined Nov 2000, 356 posts, RR: 2
Reply 1, posted (4 years 11 months 6 days 6 hours ago) and read 521 times:

this is a very good question. I have no idea but hope someone does...


SAA Fly the South African dream!
User currently offlineMITaero From United States, joined Jul 2003, 497 posts, RR: 6
Reply 2, posted (4 years 11 months 6 days 6 hours ago) and read 482 times:

do a search:

http://www.iata.org/membership/airlines/airlinemembership

User currently offlineSwissgabe From Switzerland, joined Jan 2000, 5164 posts, RR: 24
Reply 3, posted (4 years 11 months 6 days 5 hours ago) and read 449 times:

JetBlue has a IATA No. 279 and their IATA code is B6.

How can it be possible, having a IATA No. without being a IATA Member?

I think most airlines which have published flights in the CRS are IATA members. Otherwise they can't use facilities such as BSP.

Other airlines having IATA No. and Codes (QV as example) are not listed on the Member list as well. So I think it should be possible to get a IATA No. without being a member.


Suid-Afrikaanse Lugdiens - Springbok
User currently offlineHa763 From United States, joined Jan 2003, 2638 posts, RR: 4
Reply 4, posted (4 years 11 months 6 days 5 hours ago) and read 416 times:
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There currently are 274 IATA members. You do not have to be a member to use many of the IATA services like BSP. You just would need to pay the user charges to use them. As long as the requirements for the services available to all airlines are met, any non-member airline can use them. Plus airlines qualify for some IATA services by being ATA members, like the 2-character designation and 3-digit accounting code/prefix. The link shows the "steps" to becoming an IATA member. It also shows who is eligible to use their services.

http://www.iata.org/membership/airlines/steps.htm

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