The sheer size of the Airbus A380 means that its operators can only truly make it work on high-density hub-and-spoke routes where demand is strong enough to consistently fill the double-decker widebody quadjet. While no US airline has ever flown the superjumbo, plenty of other operators do serve stateside destinations with these behemoths. However, over the years, certain American airports have lost their A380 connections altogether.
This analysis explores the three US hubs that no longer see the type. It is worth noting from the start that it will not cover routes temporarily suspended by Middle Eastern carriers due to capacity cuts amid the Iran war.
Atlanta, Georgia
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL), the world’s busiest by passenger traffic, used to be served by two different A380 users on a scheduled basis. Both were SkyTeam members, which is apt given Delta’s huge presence at the facility. The airlines in question were Air France, which flew the A380 there as a one-off in 2017 and then regularly in 2019, and Korean Air, which operated A380s from 2013 to 2017.
Separately,
Qatar Airways also flew the A380 to Atlanta on a one-off basis back in June of 2016, to mark the launch of its new route there from Doha Hamad International (DOH), which was henceforth served by the Boeing 777. However, according to MEED, it was not the glorious arrival that the airline had in mind, as the A380 was not allocated a gate, forcing guests to disembark by stairs and buses. Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al-Baker commented on the new service back in 2016.
“In honor of [the route’s inauguration], we wished to provide our passengers with a unique experience, in addition to the Airbus A350 and the Boeing 777, which are signature products that we currently fly across all our gateways in the US.”
Chicago, Illinois
Atlanta isn’t the only US airport where a major Middle Eastern flag carrier has deployed the quadjet on a one-off basis. Indeed,
Emirates also did so back in July of 2016, when it flew one of its superjumbos from its main hub at Dubai International (DXB) to
Chicago O’Hare International Airport (ORD) for the very first time.
Interestingly, however, this was not done to mark the launch of a new route. Instead, as Emirates explained at the time, O’Hare Airport invited the carrier to deploy one of its double-decker widebody quadjets on a one-off basis “to test the gate, operations, and significant infrastructure improvements that have been implemented to accommodate A380 service.” This laid the foundations for regular service in the years that followed.
However, this regular service wasn’t operated by Emirates but by
British Airways. The UK flag carrier served Chicago regularly with the A380 from its main hub at
London Heathrow Airport (LHR) in 2018 and 2019, and, following a pandemic-induced operational hiatus, in 2022 and 2023. Nowadays, however, data from Cirium, an aviation analytics company, shows that it favors 777 and 787 twinjets on this US route.
British Airways Has Ended Airbus A380 Flights On 8 Routes [Updated List]
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Orlando, Florida
Another US destination that Emirates served with the A380 on a one-off basis was
Orlando International Airport (MCO) in Florida. The superjumbo flew there back in September of 2015 to mark the inauguration of the UAE flag carrier’s new route from Dubai, which was thereafter served by 777-200LR twinjets. The quadjet was greeted with a water cannon salute, as is common practice for such flights.
The new route ended up outperforming the airport’s expectations, with Vicki Jaramillo, its Senior Director of Marketing & Air Service Development, telling Aviation Week in 2016 that it had seen especially strong demand from the Indian community in Orlando. Indeed, Jaramillo said that this had caused Emirates “to up-gauge aircraft to a 777-300ER and [talk] seriously about upgrading to an A380.” For now, however, it remains a 777 stronghold.









