How far can a 757-300 fly?

Boeing — Commercial

Boeing 757-300 Explore the 757-300's range on the map →

The Boeing 757-300 can fly up to 4,400 nautical miles (8,149 km) as a ferry flight with no payload. With a full load of passengers and cargo, the range drops to approximately 3,395 nm (6,288 km). At its cruise speed of 460 kt, that's about 9h 34m of non-stop flying at ferry weight, or 7h 23m fully loaded.

Range Specifications

Ferry Range
4,400 nm
8,149 km — 9h 34m
Max Payload Range
3,395 nm
6,288 km — 7h 23m
Cruise Speed
460 kt
true airspeed

Longest Recorded Flight

United Airlines
Los Angeles (LAX) → Honolulu (HNL)
4,113 km · 2,556 mi · 2,221 nm
Map showing flight range of Boeing 757-300 from LAX

About the 757-300

The 757-300 stretched the -200 by 7.1 metres to accommodate 240–280 passengers, making it the longest narrowbody ever built. The fuselage stretch was impressive; the commercial response was less so. Only 55 were delivered, compared to over 1,000 of the -200, because the stretch undermined the very qualities that made the -200 legendary. More seats meant more weight, which ate into the range and short-field performance that operators valued. Airlines that needed 250+ narrowbody seats were generally better served by an A321 or, for longer ranges, a small widebody.

Condor, the German leisure carrier, was the largest operator, deploying the -300 on high-density holiday routes where the extra seats paid off on short stages where range wasn't the concern. United Airlines operated a handful before retiring them in favor of 737-900ERs. The type demonstrated a recurring lesson in commercial aviation: a stretch that adds capacity without adding range tends to find a smaller market than its predecessor, especially when widebody alternatives become more affordable.

The 757-300 is now vanishingly rare in passenger service. Most examples have been parked or scrapped, with a few converted to freighters. It's a footnote in the 757 story - a commercial experiment that confirmed the -200 had found its optimal configuration, and that the unique combination of traits that made the 757 iconic couldn't simply be scaled up by adding fuselage sections.

Runway Requirements

Takeoff (MTOW)
7,800 ft
sea level, ISA, full weight
Takeoff (Empty)
4,200 ft
operating empty weight
Landing (MLW)
5,600 ft
sea level, ISA, dry runway

Related Reading

The 757 Replacement Problem → Boeing 757/767 Type Commonality →

Compare with

757-300 vs 757-200 →

Routes & Range

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