Fort Lauderdale (FLL) → Nassau (NAS)
A reference for the Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport to Lynden Pindling International Airport route. You'll find the operators on file, the great-circle geometry, the connecting options if no nonstop fits your dates, and a short profile of each endpoint airport.
The flight from Fort Lauderdale (FLL) to Nassau (NAS) covers a great-circle distance of roughly 293 km (182 miles). Aircraft leave Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport on an initial southeast heading. As international sectors go, this one sits in the short-haul bracket: long enough that most carriers run it as its own dedicated rotation, but short enough to fit inside a single crew duty period.
2 carriers file a direct FLL to NAS sector, with JetBlue Airways and Bahamasair among the operators on record. A route attracting this many carriers usually points to a city pair with both leisure and business demand, or a competitive hub-to-hub link where the airline alliances overlap on the same metal.
Operators on the FLL → NAS direction
Carriers with at least one scheduled rotation on this sector in the OpenFlights dataset, ranked by the number of code-shared filings.
| IATA | Airline | Country | Callsign |
|---|---|---|---|
| B6 | JetBlue Airways | United States | JETBLUE |
| UP | Bahamasair | Bahamas | BAHAMAS |
At well under 1,500 km this is a regional sector. Carriers typically run narrow-body aircraft from the Airbus A320 family or the Boeing 737 series, with regional jets (Embraer E-Jet, CRJ) showing up on lower-frequency rotations. Block time runs around 1h 05m. Expect a single-aisle cabin and no real meal service. A snack and a drink is usually all you get.
If a nonstop doesn't match your dates, Atlanta (ATL), Chicago (ORD), and Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) show up on both ends of the network and make the most natural connecting points. The connecting-hubs grid below extends that list to the eight strongest options, ranked by each airport's overall departure activity. That ranking is a fast proxy for how many onward flights a single stop is likely to feed.
Connecting hubs
Airports that already appear on both ends of this network. They're the natural one-stop options when no nonstop matches your dates, ranked by overall departure activity.
This is an international sector between United States and Bahamas. Build in time for passport validity, possible visa requirements, and the time-zone gap between Fort Lauderdale and Nassau. International itineraries are quoted in local time at each end, so a "midnight" departure in Fort Lauderdale typically lands the next morning in Nassau. Customs clearance happens on first arrival in the destination country.
On the day of operation, the FLL to NAS direction lifts off heading southeast, then the great-circle track curves to compensate for the Earth's rotation. The return NAS to FLL sector heads northwest out of the gate, with 2 operators on file for the inbound side. Combine the two operator lists for a full picture of the city pair's competitive landscape.
Endpoints
Other routes from Fort Lauderdale (FLL)
Other destinations served from the same origin. Handy for combining trips or for finding an alternate first leg.
Other routes into Nassau (NAS)
Other origins that already file scheduled service into the destination airport.
Reading this route page
The operator list reflects scheduled-route filings in the OpenFlights dataset, not real-time availability. A carrier appearing here publishes a scheduled service on this sector. It isn't a live timetable, and the actual flight numbers, frequencies, and aircraft types shift season to season. For booking and current schedules, cross-reference the airline page above with the carrier's own website.
Distance here is the great-circle arc between the two airports' published coordinates. Real flight tracks wander off that line because of wind, ATC routings, oceanic crossings, and political airspace constraints. Block time is an estimate covering ground taxi, climb, cruise at typical jet speeds, and descent. Real block times shift with aircraft type, weather, and traffic, so treat the stat-strip number as a planning indicator rather than a published flight time.