Eastar Jet

Low-cost airline of South Korea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eastar Jet (ESR; Korean: 이스타항공) is a South Korean low-cost carrier with its headquarters in Gangseo-gu, Seoul.[1]

Founded26 October 2007; 18 years ago (2007-10-26)
Commenced operations7 January 2009; 17 years ago (2009-01-07)
Operating bases
Quick facts IATA, ICAO ...
EASTAR JET Co., Ltd.
이스타항공 주식회사
Eastar_Jet,_B737-800,_HL8264_(17674733324)
Eastar Jet Boeing 737-800
IATA ICAO Call sign
ZE ESR EASTAR
Founded26 October 2007; 18 years ago (2007-10-26)
Commenced operations7 January 2009; 17 years ago (2009-01-07)
Operating bases
AllianceU-FLY Alliance
Fleet size17
Destinations19
Parent company
  • Eastar Jet Group (2007–2021)
  • Sung Jung Co., Ltd (2021–2022)
  • VIG Partners (2023–present)
HeadquartersGangseo-gu, Seoul
Key peopleJoong-Seok Cho (President)
Websiteeastarjet.com
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Hangul
이스타항공
Hanja
이스타航空
Revised RomanizationIseuta Hanggong
McCune–ReischauerIsŭt'a Hanggong
Quick facts Hangul, Hanja ...
Eastar Jet
Hangul
이스타항공
Hanja
이스타航空
Revised RomanizationIseuta Hanggong
McCune–ReischauerIsŭt'a Hanggong
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History

Eastar Jet was established on October 26, 2007, and its air operator's certificate was acquired the following year on August 6. On January 7, 2009, Eastar Jet launched its first commercial flight from Seoul to Jeju with a Boeing 737. It commenced operations on its second route - Cheongju-Jeju - on June 12, 2009. Six months later, on December 24, 2009, Eastar Jet launched its first international flight from Incheon to Kuching, Malaysia. Within two years of commencing operations, the airline reached the 1 million mark in passengers carried on January 6, 2010.

The airline joined the U-FLY Alliance on July 27, 2016; it is the fifth member of the alliance.[2]

On 2 March 2020, Jeju Air, one of the South Korean low-cost carriers, decided to take over the management rights of Eastar Jet and signed a stock trading contract. Jeju Air agreed to acquire a 51.17% stake in Eastar Jet cost of 54.5 billion won,[3] and the plan got approval from the Fair Trade Commission of the Republic of Korea.[4] However, on 23 July 2020, Jeju Air announced that it was to give up the acquisition of Eastar Jet due to economic uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][6]

In August 2020, Eastar Jet pushed forward to re-mergers and acquisitions and selected three companies.[7] Eastar Jet also began restructuring, the plan included reduction of its fleet of 16 aircraft to four and reduce the labor force from 1,200 to 400; however, Jeju Air would rehire all of its dismissed employees.[8]

On June 17, 2021, it was announced that Eastar Jet was set to be acquired for more than US$97 million by property developer and preferred bidder Sung Jung, following an auction of the airline.[9] However, Sung Jung sold the entire stake of Eastar Jet to VIG Partners, a private equity fund company, in January 2023.[10]

Eastar Jet resumed operations in 2023 with three aircraft, supported by an investment from private equity firm VIG Partners. By the end of 2023, the airline had expanded its fleet to 10 aircraft.

During 2024, the fleet was expanded to 15 aircraft with the addition of four Boeing 737-800s and one Boeing 737 MAX 8. An additional 12 Boeing 737 MAX 8s were purchased. This time, the contract is for new planes rather than used ones, and the airline plans to take delivery of seven in 2025 and five in 2026, increasing the fleet to 27 aircraft by 2026.

According to AirPortal, an aviation information system of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, the number of domestic passengers of Eastar Jet between January and October 2024 was 2.2 million and 1.48 million international flights, recovering to about 72% from 2019 (2.59 million domestic and 2.5 million international).[11]

Destinations

As of September 2025, Eastar Jet flies to the following destinations. The list below includes former and future destinations.[12]

More information Country, City ...
Country City Airport Notes Refs
CambodiaSiem ReapSiem Reap International AirportAirport Closed[13]
ChinaDalianDalian Zhoushuizi International AirportTerminated[14]
HaikouHaikou Meilan International AirportTerminated[15]
HarbinHarbin Taiping International AirportTerminated[14][16]
JinanJinan Yaoqiang International AirportTerminated[14]
NingboNingbo Lishe International AirportTerminated[17]
ShanghaiShanghai Pudong International Airport[14][18]
ShenyangShenyang Taoxian International AirportTerminated[14]
YanjiYanji Chaoyangchuan International AirportTerminated[14]
YantaiYantai Penglai International Airport[19]
ZhangjiajieZhangjiajie Hehua International Airport[20]
ZhengzhouZhengzhou Xinzheng International Airport[15][21]
Hong KongHong KongHong Kong International AirportResumes 31 March 2026[22]
IndonesiaManadoSam Ratulangi International AirportCharter[23][24]
JapanFukuokaFukuoka Airport[14][25][26]
IbarakiIbaraki AirportTerminated[14]
KagoshimaKagoshima Airport[14][27]
KumamotoKumamoto Airport[14][28]
MiyazakiMiyazaki AirportTerminated[14][29]
OkinawaNaha Airport[14][30][31][28]
OsakaKansai International Airport[14][32]
SapporoNew Chitose Airport[14][33]
TokushimaTokushima Airport[14][34]
TokyoHaneda AirportTerminated[14][35]
Narita International Airport[14][32]
KazakhstanAlmatyAlmaty International Airport[36][37][38]
MacauMacauMacau International AirportTerminated[39]
MalaysiaKota KinabaluKota Kinabalu International AirportTerminated[14]
Northern Mariana IslandsSaipanSaipan International AirportTerminated
PhilippinesPuerto PrincesaPuerto Princesa International AirportTerminated[14][40]
RussiaVladivostokVladivostok International Airport SeasonalTerminated[41]
SingaporeSingaporeChangi Airport UnscheduledTerminated[42]
South KoreaBusanGimhae International AirportHub[14]
CheongjuCheongju International AirportHub[14][43]
GunsanGunsan AirportTerminated[14][44]
JejuJeju International AirportHub[14][45]
SeoulGimpo International AirportHub[14][45]
Incheon International AirportHub[14]
TaiwanHualienHualien AirportTerminated[14][46]
KaohsiungKaohsiung International AirportTerminated[14]
TaipeiSongshan Airport[14][47]
Taoyuan International Airport[14][48][49][50]
ThailandBangkokSuvarnabhumi Airport[14][51]
Chiang MaiChiang Mai International Airport[52]
VietnamDa NangDa Nang International Airport[14][53][51]
HanoiNoi Bai International AirportTerminated[14][54][55]
Nha TrangCam Ranh International Airport[14][56][26]
Phu QuocPhu Quoc International Airport[14][57]
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Codeshare agreements

Eastar Jet codeshares with the following airlines:

Fleet

Current fleet

As of December 2025, Eastar Jet operates an all-Boeing 737 fleet composed of the following aircraft:[60][61]

More information Aircraft, In service ...
Eastar Jet fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers Notes
Boeing 737-800 10 189
Boeing 737 MAX 8 10 2 Redeliveries from June 2023.[62][63]
Total 20 2
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Easter Jet is planning adding Boeing 787 Dreamliners as per 2027[64]

Retired fleet

Eastar Jet has previously operated the following aircraft types:[citation needed]

More information Aircraft, Total ...
Eastar Jet retired fleet
Aircraft Total Introduced Retired Notes
Boeing 737-600 1 2008 2013
Boeing 737-700 6 2009 2018
Boeing 737-800 20 2012 2020
Boeing 737-900ER 2 2017 2020
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See also

References

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