How far can a 767-300ER fly?

Boeing — Commercial

Boeing 767-300ER Explore the 767-300ER's range on the map →

The Boeing 767-300ER can fly up to 6,600 nautical miles (12,223 km) as a ferry flight with no payload. With a full load of passengers and cargo, the range drops to approximately 5,990 nm (11,093 km). At its cruise speed of 459 kt, that's about 14h 23m of non-stop flying at ferry weight, or 13h 3m fully loaded.

Range Specifications

Ferry Range
6,600 nm
12,223 km — 14h 23m
Max Payload Range
5,990 nm
11,093 km — 13h 3m
Cruise Speed
459 kt
true airspeed

Longest Recorded Flight

United Airlines
Munich (MUC) → Houston (IAH)
8,718 km · 5,417 mi · 4,707 nm
Map showing flight range of Boeing 767-300ER from MUC

About the 767-300ER

The 767-300ER powered the transatlantic revolution of the late 1980s and 1990s. When ETOPS-120 certification arrived in 1985 - allowing twin-engine jets to fly more than 60 minutes from the nearest airport - airlines immediately recognized that the 767 could replace three- and four-engine 747s and L-1011s on North Atlantic routes at dramatically lower operating costs. United, American, Delta, and every major European carrier embraced it for exactly this purpose.

The -300ER (Extended Range) version, with strengthened structure and additional fuel capacity, stretched the type's range to 6,090 nautical miles - enough to serve New YorkLondon, BostonFrankfurt, and similar transatlantic pairs routinely while maintaining required fuel reserves. The aircraft's GE CF6 or Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engines were the benchmark widebody powerplants of their era, and the 767's two-aisle cabin - slightly narrower than the 747 - gave passengers a noticeably better experience than the narrowbodies they'd previously endured on shorter transatlantic sectors.

Today, the 767-300ER is primarily a freighter platform. FedEx and UPS have converted hundreds, and Boeing's current 767 production is almost exclusively for the KC-46 military tanker and its civil 767F freighter. The passenger examples still flying - United operates a significant fleet on transatlantic leisure routes - are increasingly long in the tooth, with interiors that show their age compared to 787 and A350 cabins. But the economics of a paid-off airframe flying a route that generates consistent demand have kept them competitive longer than most observers expected.

Runway Requirements

Takeoff (MTOW)
8,500 ft
sea level, ISA, full weight
Takeoff (Empty)
4,800 ft
operating empty weight
Landing (MLW)
5,900 ft
sea level, ISA, dry runway

Related Reading

Great Circle & Polar Routes → North Atlantic Tracks → Boeing 757/767 Type Commonality →

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767-300ER vs A330-300 →

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