Korean Air‘s Longstanding Service to Atlanta
Korean Air has been operating flights to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport for over three decades, connecting Seoul’s Incheon International Airport with the major hub of its esteemed partner, Delta Air Lines. Historically, the Boeing 747 served as the cornerstone of this nonstop route, beginning with the 747-400 models and transitioning to the 747-8 in recent years. However, as of August 31, Korean Air has transitioned to using 777-300ERs for this route. The upcoming exception, using a Boeing 747-8, is a unique repatriation mission for South Korean citizens detained in Georgia.
ICE Raid in Georgia
Last week, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation at a construction site in Ellabell, Georgia, led to the detention of 300 South Korean nationals among 475 individuals, due to alleged visa violations. This site was under development by South Korean firms Hyundai and LG Energy Solutions, for an electric vehicle battery facility. This episode has strained diplomatic ties between the U.S. and South Korea, a country that has been investing massively in the U.S. economy. Notably, Korean Air has made significant orders for Boeing aircraft, following discussions between U.S. President Trump and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung. The South Korean government, expressing concern for its nationals’ safety, is organizing a repatriation flight using a Korean Air 747-8, scheduled to depart from Seoul on Wednesday.
The Role of the Boeing 747 on the ATL-ICN Route
The Atlanta-Seoul route is a major corridor, facilitated by Korean Air and Delta Air Lines, offering nearly 700,000 seats annually. This route, at 7,135 miles (11,480 km), was recently considered the longest Boeing 747 service globally. Delta briefly deployed 747-400s obtained from Northwest Airlines merger, but now serves the route with A350-900s, in a twice-daily rotation.
Korean Air initially used the 747-400 before upgrading to the 747-8 from 2016 onwards. Although the 747-8 was dominant on this route until last year, Korean Air has reduced its 747-8 fleet, selling five of ten to Sierra Nevada Corporation for conversion into “Doomsday Planes,” resulting in curtailed operations.
Current Deployment of Korean Air’s 747-8
From the original fleet of ten 747-8s, Korean Air now operates just four, as one was assigned to the Republic of Korea Air Force and five were sold. The airline’s remaining routes using the 747-8s are limited:
| Destination | Distance | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles | 5,978 miles (9,621 km) | 1-2 flights a day. A380 and 777-300ER also used |
| London Heathrow | 5,503 miles (8,856 km) | 3x weekly through end of October |
| Frankfurt | 5,305 miles (8,538 km) | Up to 4x weekly through end of October |
| Kuala Lumpur | 2,864 miles (4,609 km) | Up to daily through mid-October |
| Hong Kong | 1,285 miles (2,068 km) | Up to 3x weekly from October to November |
| Taipei | 909 miles (1,463 km) | Up to 2x weekly through mid-October |
| Tokyo Narita | 780 miles (1,255 km) | Up to 1x weekly through mid-October |
Los Angeles represents the longest and busiest route for Korean Air’s 747-8s, continuing into the next summer season. Other routes exhibit irregular scheduling, with availability beyond November remaining tenuous.
The possible phasing out of the 747-8 by Korean Air may be accelerated by the economic impacts of operating a small sub-fleet post the Asiana Airlines merger and due to substantial orders including 777-9s and 787-10s.




