Most long-haul airlines have some one-stop services, which could be for multiple reasons. United Airlines is no exception. It has had them for many years. In the remainder of 2026, the
Star Alliance member’s longest offering will be timed at nearly 22 hours. Fancy that?
Most analysis on ‘longest’ flights usually focuses on nonstop services, especially those that are in ultra-long-haul territory. Perhaps for obvious reasons, there is less emphasis on one-stop operations. In this article, nonstop and one-stop flights are combined.
United’s Ten Longest Nonstop & One-Stop Flights
For most airlines, one-stop services involve the same flight number and aircraft. They simply stop, refuel, and change crew. Passengers disembark and freight is unloaded, and—if the carrier has the required traffic rights—they load up for the next leg and continue.
Things are much more complicated for many of United’s one-stop flights. As four of the following ten markets show, United often uses the same flight number but deploys different aircraft on each leg.
Such operations involve changing planes in United’s
Tokyo Narita hub, which has seen a significant revival recently. Despite having the same flight number but needing to change planes, they are nonetheless fifth freedom services, as they begin/end in the US. The arrangement is similar to previous operations by United and other US carriers operating to/from Japan for many years.
Given the highly unusual nature of them, some might not believe this is a like-for-like or fair comparison. As such, it might be better not to include them at all. To make it even more intriguing, the frequency on each leg is not necessarily always the same. Clearly, they are intriguing in themselves, not least because many of the destinations are new to United’s network.
|
Maximum Block Time: April-December 2026* |
Direction Of Route With That Time (Nonstop/One-Stop) |
United’s Operations** |
|---|---|---|
|
21h 45m |
Houston Intercontinental-Tokyo Narita-Ulaanbaatar |
The Mongolian capital joined the airline’s network in 2025. UA7. Three weekly 787-9 to Tokyo, then 737 MAX 8. Fifth freedom |
|
21h 40m |
Los Angeles-Hong Kong-Bangkok |
Bangkok returned to United’s map in 2025. UA820. Daily 787-9. Same-plane service. Fifth freedom |
|
20h 45m |
Los Angeles-Hong Kong-Ho Chi Minh City |
Ho Chi Minh City returned to the airline’s network in 2025. UA152. Same-plane service. Daily 787-9. Fifth freedom |
|
20h 30m |
Los Angeles-Tokyo Narita-Cebu |
Cebu joined United’s network in 2024. UA32. Daily 787-9, then 737-800/737 MAX 8. Fifth freedom |
|
19h 15m |
Denver-Tokyo Narita-Koror |
The new route started in 2025. UA143. Daily 787-9, then 737-800/737 MAX 8. Fifth freedom |
|
18h 45m |
San Francisco-Tokyo Narita-Kaohsiung |
The Taiwanese city was first served by United in 2025. UA837. Daily 777-200ER/777-300ER/787-9 to Tokyo, then 737-800/MAX 8. Fifth freedom |
|
17h 35m |
San Francisco-Singapore |
Nonstop. Two daily 787-9 |
|
17h 35m |
Houston Intercontinental-Sydney |
Nonstop. Daily 787-9. Returns in October |
|
16h 55m |
Delhi back to Newark |
Nonstop. Daily 787-9 |
|
16h 20m |
Johannesburg back to Newark |
Nonstop. Up to daily 787-9 |
|
* Even if only one flight had that time |
** Known as of March 25, and subject to change. See the caveats above the table. For greater readability, flight numbers—which are only shown for one-stop services—only relate to routes from the US |
The Longest ‘Proper’ One-Stop Operation
Timed at up to 21h 40m, United began same-flight-number, same-plane, one-stop flights from Los Angeles to Bangkok, via Hong Kong, in October 2025. The Thai capital was previously part of the Star Alliance member’s network in 2009, when the 747-400 was flown via Narita.
United’s Ho Chi Minh City flights also operate via Hong Kong, just as they used to be. The airline returned to Vietnam in October 2025, having last flown there in 2016. As with Bangkok, Flightradar24 shows that the aircraft operating UA820 (to Bangkok) and UA152 (to Ho Chi Minh City) do indeed continue to the final Asian city.
New Flights: 11 Of The Most Exciting Airline Routes Launching This Week
See which notable examples made the list this week…
United’s Los Angeles-Hong Kong Loads Have Improved
Until last October, United flew Los Angeles-Hong Kong on a so-called terminator basis. Flights primarily operated twice a day, but with relatively poor loads. According to the US Department of Transportation, the airline only filled 63.2% of seats between January and September.
The extension of flights to Bangkok/Ho Chi Minh City was partly to capture the considerable passenger volume to/from Los Angeles. After all, they are the US’s two most-trafficked long-haul markets without nonstop flights. Of course, the nature of the traffic—mainly diaspora and leisure travelers—and the vast distance means that yields are relatively low.
To help arrest the performance of United’s Los Angeles-Hong Kong route, extending flights to Bangkok/Ho Chi Minh City was a relatively cost-effective and low-risk endeavor. In November and December, seat load factors rose to 85.5% and 86.0%, respectively. United (and Cathay) will have more head-to-head competition between Los Angeles-Hong Kong in 2026, as Delta enters the market in June.









