Cape Town International (CPT) is the second largest airport in South Africa. You can fly to 41 destinations with 29 airlines in scheduled passenger traffic.
Cape Town International (CPT) is the second largest airport in South Africa. You can fly to 41 destinations with 29 airlines in scheduled passenger traffic.
The route with the most departures is the route to Johannesburg (JNB) with an average of 336 flights from Cape Town International every week which is 40% of all weekly departures. The top international destinations from here are Dubai (DXB) and Windhoek (WDH). The two longest flights are Cape Town (CPT) to Atlanta (ATL) that takes around 15 hours and 55 minutes and Cape Town (CPT) to Dulles (IAD) with a flight time of 15 hours and 30 minutes.
Safair is the largest airline here by counting the number of departures with around 319 scheduled take-offs every week. The second largest operator from Cape Town International is Airlink. Larger aircrafts on this airport are Boeing 777, Airbus A350 and the Airbus A340. The aircraft types with most scheduled flights are the Boeing 737 and the Embraer 19X/17X.
The route with the longest flighttime from Cape Town (CPT) is to Atlanta (ATL) and takes about 16h 4min with a Airbus A350-900
Based on number of scheduled departures next month.
Based on number of scheduled departures next month





The most common aircrafts in our database
FlightsFrom.com is a useful website for finding airline routes and flight schedules globally. The idea is being able to explore destination opportunities through non-stop flights from a specific airport. It's a tool to set up your business meeting or weekend holiday based on your timeschedule and your closest airport.
Part of its appeal is that it just makes trips easier to plan; you see the departure times of every non-stop flight in a list.
I always wondered where you could fly direct from a particular airport (Burbank, I’m looking at you) and those answers can be tough to find. Not anymore!
Many mainstream sites don’t list low-cost carriers or link transoceanic flights to regionally based carriers that can provide less expensive options. For that, you need a bigger tool kit… (Hint: search by destination airport at FlightsFrom.com)
Many low-cost carriers airlines prevent their flights from showing up on some of these (read Vayama or Google Flights) third-party travel websites. If you want a chance to view all local departures, try using FlightsFrom.com