Explore the world of Airports and Airlines with quizzes on airport codes, major hubs, aircraft basics, and airline operations. These questions help you recognize key terms and real-world travel details you’ll see on tickets, boards, and route maps.

Can you match IATA airport codes to the correct city? This mixed-difficulty quiz blends well-known hubs with trickier look-alikes to sharpen your travel and aviation knowledge. Pick how many questions you want and choose a difficulty that fits your mood—then test your code-reading instincts.
Test how well you know the big three airline alliances: oneworld, SkyTeam, and Star Alliance. Identify member airlines, hubs, and frequent-flyer partnerships, plus a few tricky “used to be a member” curveballs. Choose your preferred difficulty and question count, then play at your own pace with no timer.
Decode how runways get their numbers and what happens when headings shift. This quiz covers magnetic vs true references, reciprocal runway pairs, and why airports sometimes renumber. Expect a mixed set of practical scenarios and quick rule checks.
There are 3 quizzes with 340 questions total.
No. Each question has 4 options and there is no timer, so you can answer at your own pace.
You’ll see airport codes, major airports and hubs, airline facts, route and region knowledge, and common aviation terms.
Yes. The set includes a mix of easier recognition questions and harder items that require deeper recall.
Across all quizzes in Airports And Airlines, there are 340 questions in total.
These quizzes focus on airport and airline knowledge you’ll encounter in real travel: IATA/ICAO codes, hub cities, route networks, airline brands, and common aviation terminology.
You’ll also practice reading travel-related details like destinations, regions, and operational concepts (terminals, runways, alliances) that show up in schedules and airport signage.
Each question has 4 answer options and there’s no timer, so you can think through codes, geography, and terminology at your own pace.
Quiz length and difficulty vary across the set, with a mix of quicker checks and longer runs that include both straightforward recognition and more detailed, multi-step recall.
Airport codes are standardized so systems worldwide can route passengers and baggage consistently: IATA codes are the familiar 3-letter ones used on tickets, while ICAO codes are typically 4 letters and used more in flight operations. Many large airports function as hubs where airlines concentrate connections to improve network efficiency, which is why some cities appear disproportionately often on route maps.