Airline profile

MIAT Mongolian Airlines (OM)

An at-a-glance profile of MIAT Mongolian Airlines, the active carrier registered in Mongolia under IATA code OM. Includes its callsign, ICAO identifier, and a sample of routes filed under this code.

OMIATA
MGLICAO
MONGOL AIRCallsign
12Routes on file

Carrier facts

  • Legal/common name: MIAT Mongolian Airlines
  • Country of registration: Mongolia
  • ATC callsign: MONGOL AIR
  • ICAO code: MGL

MIAT Mongolian Airlines is one of 983 active airlines indexed in this directory. The route sample below comes straight from the OpenFlights routes table. Treat it as a snapshot rather than a complete schedule. It still gives a clear picture of where the carrier flies and which airports it concentrates on.

Route sample

Up to 60 routes filed under OM. Each row links to both endpoints' airport pages and to a dedicated route page.

Routes operated by this airline
FromToRoute
HKG Hong Kong, Hong Kong ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia HKG→ULN
ICN Seoul, South Korea ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia ICN→ULN
NRT Tokyo, Japan ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia NRT→ULN
PEK Beijing, China ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia PEK→ULN
SVO Moscow, Russia TXL Berlin, Germany SVO→TXL
SVO Moscow, Russia ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia SVO→ULN
TXL Berlin, Germany SVO Moscow, Russia TXL→SVO
ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia HKG Hong Kong, Hong Kong ULN→HKG
ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia ICN Seoul, South Korea ULN→ICN
ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia NRT Tokyo, Japan ULN→NRT
ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia PEK Beijing, China ULN→PEK
ULN Ulan Bator, Mongolia SVO Moscow, Russia ULN→SVO

Top destinations in the sample

Routes operated by this airline (section 2)
IATAAirportCityCountrySample frequency
ULN Chinggis Khaan International Airport Ulan Bator Mongolia 5
SVO Sheremetyevo International Airport Moscow Russia 2
TXL Berlin-Tegel Airport Berlin Germany 1
HKG Hong Kong International Airport Hong Kong Hong Kong 1
ICN Incheon International Airport Seoul South Korea 1
NRT Narita International Airport Tokyo Japan 1
PEK Beijing Capital International Airport Beijing China 1

Reading an airline page

An airline's IATA code is the two-character identifier you see on tickets and flight numbers. The ICAO code is the three-letter identifier used in air traffic control and on flight plans. The callsign is the spoken name controllers use on the radio. Together they uniquely fingerprint the carrier across regulatory and operational systems, which is handy when you have a flight number from one source and want to confirm the operator from another.

Route samples here come from a community-maintained snapshot. They aren't a substitute for the airline's official schedule, but they reflect which markets the carrier has historically flown. They're also a fast way to spot a carrier's hubs, since hub airports turn up at the top of both the destination and origin lists.