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Oldest Planes Still Flying

"Old" in aviation can mean two very different things — the year an airframe rolled off the line, or the year a type first flew. The oldest commercial jetliner still flying anywhere is a Boeing 737-200 built in 1974 and now operated by Nolinor in northern Canada; the oldest passenger 737 with paying ticketed travellers is a 1978 airframe at Venezolana in Venezuela. Aeronaves TSM in Mexico still flies a Douglas DC-9 freighter that rolled out in August 1967. Old planes keep flying because they're cheap to acquire, simple to maintain, well-suited to niche routes — gravel runways, sanctioned countries, regional cargo — and because every commercial aircraft undergoes a full structural "D-check" every 6-10 years that effectively rebuilds the airframe.

1974
Oldest Active Airliner (737-200)
1967
Oldest Cargo Jet (DC-9)
1935
Oldest Type Flying (DC-3)
~40
737-200s Still Active

Oldest Commercial Aircraft Still Operating

#AircraftBuiltRole
1
Boeing 737-200C
Nolinor Aviation (Canada)
Reg: C-GNLK
1974Combi
2
Boeing 737-200
Venezolana (Venezuela)
Reg: YV3471
1978Passenger
3
Douglas DC-9-15
Aeronaves TSM (Mexico)
Reg: XA-UXP (MSN 47044)
1967Cargo
4
Boeing 737-200
Nolinor Aviation (Canada)
Reg: C-FTWW
~1980Charter
5
Boeing 757-200(SF)
FedEx (USA)
Reg: Various
~1983Cargo
6
Boeing 767-200(BDSF)
ABX Air (USA)
Reg: Various
~1983Cargo
7
Airbus A300B4
Iran Air
Reg: EP-IBG
1986Passenger
8
Fokker 100
Iran Air
Reg: EP-IDF
~1993Passenger
9
Boeing 747-400F
Kalitta Air (USA, in DHL livery)
Reg: N740CK
1989Cargo
10
Boeing 747-400
Mahan Air (Iran)
Reg: EP-MEE
1990Passenger

Build years for some converted freighters are approximate. Sources: Planespotters.net, AirHistory.net, ch-aviation, Simple Flying.

Oldest Aircraft Types Still in Service

Boeing 737
First flight 1967
In production (737 MAX)

The longest-running jetliner programme in history. First flight April 9, 1967; the MAX family is still rolling out of Renton today.

Boeing 747
First flight 1969
Out of production (final 747-8F delivered Jan 2023)

The Queen of the Skies first flew February 9, 1969. Lufthansa, Air China, Korean and a handful of cargo operators keep her airborne.

McDonnell Douglas DC-9 / MD-80
First flight 1965
Out of production (1982 / 1999)

DC-9 first flew 1965. Aeronaves TSM still flies original DC-9-15 freighters built in 1967. Allegiant retired the last US passenger MD-80s in 2019.

Boeing 757
First flight 1982
Out of production (2004)

United, Delta, Icelandair and FedEx all keep large 757 fleets running because nothing has matched its hot-and-high range since.

Boeing 767
First flight 1981
In production (freighter and KC-46 only)

Passenger production ended but the 767-300F freighter line lives on. Delta still operates the 767 on long-haul.

Fokker 50 / Fokker 100
First flight 1985 / 1986
Out of production (1997)

Both types still fly with Alliance Airlines (Australia), Iran Air and a handful of African and Pacific carriers.

Airbus A320 (ceo)
First flight 1987
In production (now neo)

Original A320s from the late 1980s and early 1990s still operate; the neo replaced the ceo as the production variant in 2016.

Cessna 172 Skyhawk
First flight 1955
In production

Not an airliner, but the oldest aircraft type still being built. More than 44,000 produced since 1956.

Vintage Aircraft Still Flying Commercially

Douglas DC-3 / C-47
First flight 1935
Buffalo Airways (Canada), various warbird operators

Buffalo Airways still flies the DC-3 in cargo service in the Northwest Territories — typically twice-daily Hay River to Yellowknife runs of about 45 minutes each. The type entered service 90 years ago.

Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation
First flight 1951
Mostly retired; museum and airshow examples only

The last airworthy "Super Connie" airshow examples ceased flying in the 2010s. Civilian transport use ended in the 1990s.

Convair 580
First flight 1952 (CV-340 base)
Nolinor and a few US/Canadian cargo operators

Turboprop conversions of 1950s Convair 240/340/440 twins. A handful still fly cargo and survey roles.

Lockheed L-188 Electra
First flight 1957
Buffalo Airways (cargo), Air Spray (firefighting)

Four-engine turboprop airliner. Used today as freighters and aerial firefighting tankers.

Why are old planes still safe?

Aircraft don't age the way cars do. Every commercial airliner is on a strict, regulated maintenance cycle that includes A-checks (every ~600 flight hours), C-checks (every 18-24 months) and D-checks (every 6-10 years). A D-check is a near-total teardown: the aircraft is stripped to bare metal, internal structure is inspected with eddy-current and ultrasonic testing, corroded parts are replaced, and the airframe is essentially rebuilt. A 50-year-old 737-200 has had five or six of these.

The relevant safety metric for an airframe isn't calendar age — it's cycles (one takeoff + landing) and flight hours. Each pressurisation cycle flexes the fuselage, which is why short-haul jets with many cycles tend to be retired before long-haul aircraft of the same age. A high-utilisation 767 like Delta's N171DN has clocked 147,000 flight hours and 22,000 cycles; a low-cycle Arctic 737-200 doing two short legs a day may have less structural fatigue at 50 years old than a high-cycle narrowbody at 25.

Why do airlines retire planes early?

Most airliners are retired long before they're unsafe. The economics turn against an old airframe for four reasons. First, fuel — a 737-200 burns roughly 30-40% more fuel per seat than a 737 MAX over the same route, and fuel is the single largest line item in airline operating costs. Second, the maintenance cost curve climbs steeply after roughly 20 years; D-checks get more expensive, parts become harder to source.

Third, noise rules — ICAO Stage 4 and 5 regulations push older Pratt & Whitney JT8D-powered jets like the 737-200 and DC-9 out of major Western airports, which is why most survivors operate in Africa, Latin America, Iran or remote Canada. Fourth, ETOPS extensions and modern avionics let new twin-engine aircraft fly routes the old quad-engine and trijet generation could only dream of, and at far lower trip cost.

The aircraft that survive past 40 years almost always have one thing in common: they fly into a niche where the new generation can't compete. Gravel runways, sanctioned airspace, ultra-cheap charter, dedicated freight on routes too thin for a new 767-300F.

Sources

  • Planespotters.net — individual airframe histories and registration timelines
  • AirHistory.net — production photos and serial number records
  • ch-aviation — fleet age data for Iran Air, Mahan Air, Nolinor and Aeronaves TSM
  • Simple Flying, AeroTime, Airport Spotting — operator coverage of 737-200, DC-9 and 747 fleets
  • Wikipedia — Boeing 737, DC-3, Nolinor Aviation, Aeronaves TSM articles