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A baggage tag for a flight heading to Oral Ak Zhol Airport, whose IATA airport code is "URA". An IATA airport code, also known as an IATA location identifier, IATA station code, or simply a location identifier, is a three-letter geocode designating many airports and metropolitan areas around the world, defined by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). [1]
IATA time zone is a country or a part of a country, where local time is the same. IATA time zone code is constructed of 2–4 characters (letters and digits) as follows: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code is always used as first and second characters of time zone code. If country is not divided into separate time zones – no more characters added.
Former IATA code: QA; former ICAO code: AEK; former callsign: AFRICAN EXPRESS AK AXM AirAsia: RED CAP Malaysia ICAO code no longer allocated D7 XAX AirAsia X: XANADU Malaysia DJ WAJ AirAsia Japan: WING ASIA Japan defunct I5 IAD AirAsia India: ARIYA India Founded 28. Mar 2013: AXN Alexandair: ALEXANDROS Greece defunct AXP Aeromax: AEROMAX SPAIN ...
IATA – The airport code assigned by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). Those that do not match the FAA code are shown in bold. ICAO – The location indicator assigned by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). AIRPORT – The official airport name. ROLE – One of four FAA airport categories.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA / aɪ ˈ ɑː t ə /) is a trade association of the world's airlines founded in 1945. [4] IATA has been described as a cartel since, in addition to setting technical standards for airlines, IATA also organized tariff conferences that served as a forum for price fixing .
IATA Code; Barahona: María Montez International Airport: BRX La Romana: La Romana International Airport: LRM Punta Cana: Punta Cana International Airport: PUJ Samana:
UNECE. 28 February 2012. - includes IATA codes "ICAO Location Indicators by State" (PDF). International Civil Aviation Organization. 17 September 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2019; Aviation Safety Network - IATA and ICAO airport codes; Great Circle Mapper - IATA, ICAO and FAA airport codes
The IATA codes were originally based on the ICAO designators which were issued in 1947 as two-letter airline identification codes (see the section below). IATA expanded the two-character-system with codes consisting of a letter and a digit (or vice versa) e.g. EasyJet's U2 after ICAO had introduced its current three-letter-system in 1982. Until ...