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AFvsKL

Air France vs KLM 2026

Air France's La Premiere First and free Starlink Wi-Fi vs KLM's first A350s and the Schiphol hub. Both share Flying Blue miles. What's actually different.
By Caden SorensonSourced from official Air France & KLM Royal Dutch Airlines policy pages
On this page
  1. Quick verdict
  2. Side-by-side specs
  3. What We Looked For
  4. Does Air France or KLM have better Busin...
  5. Does Air France have First Class? Does K...
  6. How does Economy and Premium Economy com...
  7. Is it easier to connect through CDG or S...
  8. Where does each airline fly that the oth...
  9. Does Flying Blue work the same on both a...
  10. Who Should Pick Air France
  11. Who Should Pick KLM
  12. The Bottom Line
  13. FAQ
  14. Go deeper
  15. Related

Quick verdict

Carry-on
Tie
Checked bag
KLM Royal Dutch Airlineswins
Basic economy
Tie
Overall: It depends on your priorities

Air France wins on premium cabin products (La Premiere First Class with 5-window suites is something KLM simply does not offer), free Starlink Wi-Fi rolling out fleet-wide by end of 2026, a larger long-haul fleet (229 aircraft vs 122), and a deeper network in Africa and French overseas territories. KLM wins on hub efficiency (Schiphol is easier to connect through than CDG), Dutch Caribbean routes (Curacao, Aruba, Bonaire, Suriname), a free first checked bag on Standard and Flex economy fares (Air France charges from $60 on its equivalent fares), and the first A350 deliveries expected in summer 2026. Carry-on rules and basic-economy restrictions are identical. Both share the Flying Blue loyalty program with identical earning and redemption rules.

Air France vs KLM Royal Dutch Airlines specification comparison
SpecAir FranceKLM Royal Dutch Airlines
Carry-on (in)21.7 x 13.8 x 9.8"21.7 x 13.8 x 9.8"
Carry-on (cm)55 x 35 x 25 cm55 x 35 x 25 cm
Carry-on weight12 kg (26.5 lb)12 kg (26.5 lb)
Carry-on feeFreeFree
Personal item15.7 x 11.8 x 5.9"15.7 x 11.8 x 5.9"
1st checked bag$60$0
2nd checked bag$100$100
Basic economyLightBasic
Gate-check riskMediumMedium

Air France and KLM are the most unusual airline comparison because they share the same parent company, the same loyalty program, and the same alliance, yet they operate as genuinely different airlines with different fleets, service cultures, hubs, and route networks. Air France-KLM S.A. is a Franco-Dutch holding company that does not homogenize its brands. Flying Air France out of Paris CDG and flying KLM out of Amsterdam Schiphol are different experiences, even when you earn the same Flying Blue miles.

Short version: Air France is the premium option within the group. La Premiere First Class (which KLM does not offer at all), a larger fleet, deeper long-haul network, free Starlink Wi-Fi rolling out fleet-wide, and a French luxury dining culture. KLM is the efficient option. A more navigable hub at Schiphol, unique Dutch Caribbean routes, the first A350 deliveries in summer 2026, and a Dutch pragmatic service style. The loyalty program is identical. The onboard experience is not.

What We Looked For

Since both airlines share Flying Blue and SkyTeam, the comparison focuses on what actually differs:

  • Premium cabin products, especially La Premiere (Air France only) and Business Class seat hardware
  • Hub experience, since CDG and Schiphol are structurally different airports
  • Route network differences, where each airline serves destinations the other does not
  • Wi-Fi and fleet modernization, where Air France has a Starlink advantage
  • Service culture, which is genuinely different between French and Dutch crews
  • Economy and Premium Economy, for travelers in the back of the plane

Does Air France or KLM have better Business Class?

Both now fly a 1-2-1 business suite with a sliding door. Air France’s newer “3 Fs” seat is generally the more premium of the two; KLM’s Jamco Venture seat is close behind and still rolling out across its 777 fleet.

Air France Business Class (the new “3 Fs” seat):

  • Built around Full Flat, Full Access, and Full Privacy: a 1-2-1 suite where every seat has a sliding privacy door and direct aisle access, 48 per aircraft
  • Converts to a full 2 m (about 79 in) flat bed, with a 17.3-inch 4K screen, Bluetooth audio, and wireless charging
  • Flies on the 777-300ER and the A350-900, with a Sofitel MY BED mattress topper added from July 2025
  • Roughly half the 777-300ER fleet retrofitted as of early 2026, with the rest targeted by end of 2026

KLM World Business Class:

  • Jamco Venture seats in a 1-2-1 layout with a sliding privacy door and direct aisle access for every passenger, reclining to a 198 cm (about 78 in) lie-flat bed
  • Already on the 787-9 and 787-10; KLM is now fitting the same seat across its entire Boeing 777-300 and 777-200 fleet, with seats and fittings 10 to 15 percent lighter than a typical business seat
  • KLM’s first A350-900s are expected in 2026, further modernizing its long-haul business cabin

Both airlines now fly 1-2-1 layouts with sliding privacy doors. Air France’s newer seat is generally considered slightly more premium (larger suite feel, stronger dining), but the two are close, and KLM’s incoming A350s will narrow the gap further.

Air France (new “3 Fs” seat)KLM World Business Class
Layout1-2-1, all-aisle access1-2-1, all-aisle access
Privacy doorYes, sliding doorYes, sliding door
Bed2 m (about 79 in) flat198 cm (about 78 in) flat
Screen17.3-inch 4KPersonal seatback screen
ChargingWireless, Bluetooth audioIn-seat power
Seat platformNew “3 Fs” suite, 48 per aircraftJamco Venture
Fleet777-300ER + A350-900 (retrofit to end 2026)787-9/-10 + 777 fleet; A350 from 2026
Winner: current Business Class hardware
Air France / slightly; newer 3 Fs seat
Winner: privacy door
Tie / both have sliding doors
Winner: fleet rollout
Air France / new seat already on 777 + A350

Does Air France have First Class? Does KLM?

Air France operates La Premiere First Class on approximately 24 Boeing 777-300ERs. KLM has no First Class at all.

This is the single clearest product difference between the two airlines.

Air France La Premiere:

  • 4 suites per aircraft, completely redesigned with multiple personal windows per suite
  • Separate ergonomic seat and chaise longue converting to a 2 m (about 79 in) flat bed
  • Full-length, full-height privacy curtain
  • Two 32-inch 4K screens, noise-canceling headphones, complimentary Wi-Fi
  • French gastronomy: multi-course menus with champagne and a wine list curated by sommeliers
  • Expanding network: La Premiere serves approximately 14 routes in summer 2026, including New York JFK, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami, Atlanta (new March 2026), Houston (new July 2026), Boston (new July 2026), Singapore, Dubai, Tokyo, Sao Paulo, Tel Aviv, and Abidjan

KLM: No First Class. The highest cabin is World Business Class.

If First Class is important to your trip, the decision is already made. Air France is the only option within the group.

Winner: First Class
Air France / KLM does not compete

How does Economy and Premium Economy compare?

Air France has better Premium Economy seats and free Starlink Wi-Fi rolling out. KLM has free Wi-Fi on European short-haul only.

Economy:

  • Air France: 81 cm (32 in) seat pitch, 46 cm (18 in) width
  • KLM: 79 cm (31 in) pitch, 44 cm (17.5 in) width
  • Both serve free meals and beverages on long-haul (beer, wine included)
  • Both use tiered Wi-Fi pricing on long-haul (Message/Surf/Stream)

Premium Economy:

  • Air France: up to 97 cm (38.2 inches) of legroom, fixed-shell seats that slide forward (do not recline into the row behind). Widely rated as one of the better Premium Economy products on transatlantic routes.
  • KLM Premium Comfort: standard reclining seats (recline into the row behind). 13.3-inch screen vs 11-inch in economy. Good value but not as well-regarded as Air France’s.

Wi-Fi:

  • Air France: Free Starlink Wi-Fi rolling out fleet-wide. 40 percent of fleet equipped by end of March 2026, targeting full fleet by end of 2026. Free for all Flying Blue members (free to join).
  • KLM: Free Wi-Fi on European short-haul flights (launched January 2026). No Starlink on long-haul. Standard paid tiered Wi-Fi on intercontinental routes.

The Starlink gap is a meaningful 2026 differentiator. Air France passengers on equipped aircraft get free high-speed internet. KLM passengers on long-haul pay for tiered Wi-Fi.

Winner: economy pitch
Air France / 81 cm (32 in) vs 79 cm (31 in)
Winner: Premium Economy seat design
Air France / fixed-shell, more legroom
Winner: long-haul Wi-Fi
Air France / free Starlink on equipped aircraft
Winner: short-haul Wi-Fi
KLM / free on European flights

Is it easier to connect through CDG or Schiphol?

Schiphol is generally easier for connections. CDG has more capacity but a more complex terminal layout.

Paris Charles de Gaulle (CDG):

  • France’s largest airport, one of Europe’s busiest
  • Air France operates approximately 800 daily flights, serving nearly 170 destinations across 73 countries
  • Multi-terminal layout can make connections confusing, especially between terminals
  • Minimum connection times: 2+ hours recommended for terminal changes
  • Air France operates 6 lounges at CDG. The renovated Terminal 2F lounges are highly rated for food, architecture, and amenities.

Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS):

  • Ranked 3rd in Europe for hub connectivity
  • KLM serves 164 destinations
  • Single-terminal concept is more navigable than CDG’s layout
  • Shorter minimum connection times than CDG on average
  • Government-imposed flight cap limits growth
  • KLM Crown Lounges offer showers, sleep cabins, and a terrace. The non-Schengen lounge is well-regarded; the Schengen lounge (Crown Lounge 25) is frequently overcrowded.

Both airports have experienced disruptions from staffing shortages in ground handling. Neither is immune to delays. When a delay runs 3 or more hours or a flight is cancelled on short notice for a reason within the airline’s control, both carriers fall under EU261, which can owe you €250 to €600 in compensation separate from any rebooking.

Winner: connection ease
Schiphol
Winner: lounge quality
Air France at CDG / narrowly
Winner: capacity and growth potential
CDG / Schiphol is capped

Where does each airline fly that the other does not?

Air France has deeper coverage of Africa and French overseas territories. KLM has unique Dutch Caribbean and Indonesian routes.

Air France unique strengths:

  • French overseas territories: Guadeloupe, Martinique, Reunion, French Guiana (Cayenne), New Caledonia
  • Deep West and Central Africa network (historical Francophone connections): Abidjan, Douala, Brazzaville, Bamako, Dakar, Conakry
  • Las Vegas (new for summer 2026)
  • Larger long-haul fleet: 229 aircraft total, approximately 120 widebody

KLM unique strengths:

  • Dutch Caribbean: Curacao (daily), Aruba and Bonaire (daily combined), Suriname (Paramaribo, daily)
  • Indonesia: Jakarta (via Kuala Lumpur), Bali/Denpasar (Dutch colonial ties)
  • New for 2026: Jersey, Santiago de Compostela, Oviedo
  • Fleet: 122 aircraft total, 69 widebody

Overlapping long-haul destinations: New York, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Singapore, Sao Paulo, Cape Town, Bangkok, and many others are served by both airlines from their respective hubs. On overlapping routes, the choice comes down to hub preference (CDG vs Schiphol), cabin product, and schedule.

Winner: Africa
Air France
Winner: Caribbean
KLM / Dutch Caribbean routes AF does not serve
Winner: network size
Air France / 170 destinations vs 164, larger long-haul fleet

Does Flying Blue work the same on both airlines?

Yes. Flying Blue is identical regardless of which airline you fly.

Flying Blue is the shared loyalty program of Air France, KLM, and Transavia. There are no meaningful differences in earning or redemption between the two airlines:

  • Earning: revenue-based (miles per euro spent), same rates on both carriers at every elite tier
  • Tiers: Explorer, Silver, Gold, Platinum, Ultimate (invitation-only). Status earned via Experience Points (XP), not miles.
  • Redemption: dynamic pricing (no fixed award chart). One-way transatlantic business class starts at approximately 60,000 miles on both airlines.
  • Miles expiry: 24 months of inactivity. Any eligible activity extends the entire balance.
  • SkyTeam recognition: elite status is recognized identically across all SkyTeam partners regardless of which airline you fly within the group.
  • Transfer partners: Flying Blue is a transfer partner of major US credit card programs (Amex, Chase, Citi).

The shared program is the strongest argument for flexible switching between the two airlines based on schedule and routing rather than loyalty alignment.

Who Should Pick Air France

  • La Premiere First Class matters for your trip (KLM has none)
  • You want free Starlink Wi-Fi on long-haul flights
  • You are connecting to Africa, French overseas territories, or Francophone destinations
  • You value French gastronomy and a more formal dining experience onboard
  • You prefer a slightly more spacious economy and Premium Economy seat
  • You are flying from a US city where Air France operates La Premiere (JFK, LAX, SFO, Miami, Atlanta, Houston, Boston)

Who Should Pick KLM

  • You prefer an easier connection at Schiphol over CDG’s multi-terminal layout
  • You are flying to the Dutch Caribbean (Curacao, Aruba, Bonaire) or Suriname
  • You are connecting to Indonesia (Jakarta, Bali)
  • You prefer a more casual, pragmatic service style over French formality
  • You want to fly KLM’s A350 when it enters service in 2026 with its newest long-haul business cabin
  • Free Wi-Fi on European short-haul matters for your travel pattern

The Bottom Line

Air France is the premium option within the Air France-KLM Group. La Premiere First Class, free Starlink Wi-Fi, the larger long-haul fleet, and deeper Africa network give it the edge for premium travelers and long-haul routing. KLM is the efficient option: easier hub, unique Dutch Caribbean routes, and a pragmatic service culture.

The loyalty program is identical, so there is no cost to switching between the two based on route and schedule. The real decision factors are hub preference (CDG vs Schiphol), cabin product (La Premiere exists only on Air France), route network (Africa and French territories vs Dutch Caribbean and Indonesia), and Wi-Fi (Starlink on Air France vs paid on KLM long-haul).

For most transatlantic travelers, try both. The Flying Blue miles go to the same place, and experiencing the cultural difference between French and Dutch service is part of the appeal of flying a European airline.

For more comparisons, see Air France vs Lufthansa and Delta vs KLM.

Frequently asked questions

Are Air France and KLM the same airline?
No, but they share the same parent company. Air France-KLM S.A. is a Franco-Dutch holding company that operates Air France, KLM, and Transavia as separate brands with different fleets, crews, service cultures, and bases. Air France is based at Paris Charles de Gaulle. KLM is based at Amsterdam Schiphol. Both share the Flying Blue loyalty program and SkyTeam alliance membership, and miles earned on either airline go into the same account.
Do Air France and KLM share a loyalty program?
Yes. Flying Blue is the joint loyalty program. Miles earned on Air France go into the same account as miles earned on KLM, and you can redeem on either airline. Elite status tiers (Silver, Gold, Platinum, Ultimate) confer the same SkyTeam recognition regardless of which airline you fly. Earning rates are identical on both carriers.
Does KLM have a First Class?
No. KLM does not operate a First Class cabin on any aircraft. The highest cabin on KLM is World Business Class. Air France operates La Premiere First Class on a subfleet of approximately 24 Boeing 777-300ERs, with 4 suites per aircraft. La Premiere is expanding to approximately 14 routes by summer 2026. If First Class matters, Air France is the only option.
Which has better Business Class, Air France or KLM?
Air France's new business suite (its 'Full Flat, Full Access, Full Privacy' seat with a sliding door, 17.3-inch 4K screen, and a 2 m / 79 in flat bed) is generally considered a step above KLM's retrofitted Jamco Venture seats on the 777, though KLM's product also has sliding privacy doors in a 1-2-1 layout. KLM's first A350s are expected in 2026, which will further modernize its long-haul business cabin and narrow the gap.
Is it easier to connect through CDG or Schiphol?
Schiphol is generally easier. Amsterdam's single-terminal concept is more navigable than CDG's multi-terminal layout. Minimum connection times are typically shorter at Schiphol. However, Schiphol faces a government-imposed flight cap that limits growth, and staffing shortages have caused periodic disruptions at both airports.

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Caden Sorenson

Travel research publisher and senior staff engineer

Caden Sorenson runs Travel Vient, an independent travel research and tools site covering airline carry-on policies, packing lists, and head-to-head airline, cruise, and destination comparisons, with everything cited to primary sources. He's a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools, and a Computer Science graduate from Utah State University. Based in Logan, Utah.

Last verified Jun 2026 against official Air France and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.