China Airlines or EVA Air: Which Is Better in 2026?
Taipei's two flag carriers compared: EVA Air's 4th-gen Premium Economy and Star Alliance reach vs China Airlines' broader 90-city network and SkyTeam access.
On this page
- Quick verdict
- Side-by-side specs
- What We Looked For
- Are China Airlines and EVA Air baggage p...
- Which airline has a better cabin product...
- Which airline is safer and more reliable...
- Which airline has a broader network?
- Is Infinity MileageLands or Dynasty Flye...
- Who Should Pick China Airlines
- Who Should Pick EVA Air
- The Bottom Line
- FAQ
- Go deeper
- Related
Quick verdict
EVA Air wins on Skytrax rating (5-star vs China Airlines' 4-star), on the fourth-generation Premium Economy launched February 2025 (107 cm / 42 in pitch, 2-3-2, 15.6-inch Panasonic IFE), on Royal Laurel business class consistency, on safety record, and on Star Alliance partner depth. China Airlines wins on raw network breadth (around 90 destinations vs EVA's ~45), on stronger Australia and New Zealand service, on SkyTeam alliance for travelers tied to Delta or Air France-KLM, and on the upcoming A350-1000 deliveries. Carry-on and checked-bag rules are functionally identical. Pick EVA Air for premium cabin and Star Alliance. Pick China Airlines for network breadth and SkyTeam.
| Spec | China Airlines | EVA Air |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 22 x 14 x 9" | 22 x 14 x 9" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 56 x 36 x 23 cm | 56 x 36 x 23 cm |
| Carry-on weight | 7 kg (15 lb) | 7 kg (15 lb) |
| Carry-on fee | Free | Free |
| Personal item | 16 x 12 x 6" | 16 x 12 x 4" |
| 1st checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| 2nd checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| Basic economy | Not restricted | Not restricted |
| Gate-check risk | Medium | Medium |
Taipei’s two flag carriers do not look that different on paper. China Airlines and EVA Air both fly from Taoyuan (TPE) on similar long-haul fleets, both run Boeing 777-300ERs and Boeing 787s, both offer 7 kg cabin bag plus a personal item in Economy, both include two 23 kg checked bags on long-haul Economy Standard fares, and both fly into the major US gateways. The differences are in the things that compound over time: cabin generation, alliance membership, and the consistency of the on-board experience.
EVA Air holds a 5-star Skytrax rating. China Airlines holds 4-star. EVA Air’s safety record is materially cleaner. EVA Air launched its fourth-generation Premium Economy seat in February 2025, deploying first on Taipei-Jakarta with rollout planned to Munich, Milan, Vienna, and the San Francisco day flight. The seat runs 107 cm / 42 in of pitch in a 2-3-2 layout with a 15.6-inch HD Panasonic touchscreen, a cradle-motion recline mechanism, and full power outlets at every seat. China Airlines’ Premium Economy is competitive but older, at around 97 to 99 cm / 38 to 39 in on the A350-900. For the kind of traveler who upgrades from Economy on a long-haul flight, that gap is real.
China Airlines pushes back on raw network reach. It serves around 90 destinations from Taipei versus EVA Air’s roughly 45 long-haul-plus-regional combined, and is stronger in Oceania, where it runs more frequencies into Australia and New Zealand. China Airlines also has 15 Airbus A350-1000s on order plus five 777-9s, four 777-8Fs, and two 777Fs, which will refresh its long-haul fleet starting in 2027. For SkyTeam loyalists tied to Delta SkyMiles or Air France-KLM Flying Blue, China Airlines is the natural Taiwan partner. For Star Alliance loyalists tied to United MileagePlus or Singapore KrisFlyer, EVA Air is the natural choice. The choice is partly which alliance ecosystem you already belong to.
What We Looked For
- Cabin product, especially Premium Economy, where EVA Air’s February 2025 fourth-generation seat creates a clear gap
- Skytrax ratings and historical safety record, the most-cited public differentiators between these two carriers
- Alliance membership and US loyalty currency access, where SkyTeam versus Star Alliance is a binary structural choice
- Network breadth and US gateway count, where China Airlines has more destinations and EVA Air has more US cities
- Fleet refresh trajectory through the late 2020s, with both carriers receiving A350-1000s and EVA Air retrofitting its 777-300ERs starting 2026
- Carry-on and checked-bag policies, which are nearly identical and not a meaningful decision point
- Loyalty program structure, where Infinity MileageLands has Citi as a US credit card transfer partner and Dynasty Flyer has no US transfer partner
Are China Airlines and EVA Air baggage policies the same?
Functionally yes. Both allow a 7 kg cabin bag at 56x36x23 cm in Economy. Both include two 23 kg checked bags on Standard long-haul Economy fares. The personal item dimensions differ slightly.
Carry-on. Both airlines allow one cabin bag at 56x36x23 cm (22x14x9 in), 7 kg / 15 lb, with a 115 cm / 45 in linear cap. Business and Royal Laurel passengers on EVA Air get two cabin bags at 7 kg each. China Airlines Business also gets two carry-on bags. Both airlines enforce the 7 kg weight limit at the gate.
Personal item. China Airlines allows a personal item at 40x30x15 cm. EVA Air allows a personal item at 40x30x10 cm, notably thinner at only 10 cm (4 in) of depth. If your “personal item” is a slim laptop bag or daypack, either airline accepts it. If you carry a deep camera bag or backpack, China Airlines is slightly more forgiving.
Checked bag, long-haul. Both airlines include two 23 kg / 50 lb checked bags on Economy Standard and above. Both strip the second bag from the cheapest Economy Discount fare. Business class on both gets two 32 kg / 70 lb bags. Premium Economy on both gets two bags (EVA Air at 23 kg each, China Airlines at 28 kg each). Maximum linear dimensions are 158 cm / 62 in on both.
Excess bag fees. EVA Air’s prepaid extra bag costs around USD 180 (Zone 3: LAX, SEA, SFO, YVR, HNL) or USD 207 (Zone 4: other North America and Europe), with 10 percent off for online prepayment 4+ hours before departure. China Airlines’ airport excess runs about USD 280 per piece or USD 10 per kg, with prepaid online at USD 252 per piece. EVA Air is structurally cheaper for excess bag add-ons.
- Winner: carry-on dimensions
- Tie / both 56x36x23 cm / 7 kg
- Winner: personal item depth
- China Airlines / 15 cm vs EVA's 10 cm
- Winner: Premium Economy checked weight
- China Airlines / 28 kg vs EVA 23 kg per bag
- Winner: prepaid excess bag price
- EVA Air / lower zone-based pricing
Which airline has a better cabin product?
EVA Air, in 2026. The fourth-generation Premium Economy seat is the standout. Royal Laurel business is more consistently deployed than China Airlines’ business product. The Skytrax 5-star vs 4-star gap is earned.
Premium Economy. EVA Air’s fourth-generation Premium Economy launched February 2025 with 28 seats in a 2-3-2 layout, 107 cm / 42 in of pitch, a 15.6-inch HD Panasonic touchscreen, cradle motion recline (about 20 cm / 8 in of effective recline without backwards intrusion), 110V AC plus USB combo power, and personal device holders on the tray table. Initial deployment was on Taipei-Jakarta with rollout planned to Munich, Milan, Vienna direct, and the San Francisco day flight. EVA Air will continue to deploy this cabin on eight additional 787-9s through 2029 (though the 787-10s are two-class and skip Premium Economy). China Airlines Premium Economy on the A350-900 is a competent product at approximately 97 to 99 cm / 38 to 39 in of pitch with personal IFE, but the seat hardware is an earlier generation. For travelers who specifically book Premium Economy on long-haul flights, EVA Air is the materially better experience.
Business class. EVA Air Royal Laurel uses 1-2-1 reverse-herringbone layouts on 777-300ER and 787-9 with direct aisle access, lie-flat beds, and large IFE screens. The cabin is consistent across the fleet. EVA Air’s 777-300ER cabin retrofit starts in 2026 across 20 aircraft, adding more business class lie-flat seats per aircraft and refreshing the IFE and cabin environment. China Airlines business class on A350-900 and 777-300ER also uses 1-2-1 layouts with lie-flat conversion, but consistency varies more by individual aircraft. Once EVA Air’s 24 A350-1000s arrive starting in 2026, the consistency gap will widen.
Economy. Both airlines run a similar 3-3-3 layout on 777-300ER and 3-3-3 on 787-9. Pitch is around 81 cm / 32 in on both. Personal IFE is standard. EVA Air’s Hello Kitty themed flights are unique to EVA. China Airlines Economy meal service is competent; EVA Air’s is more consistently praised.
First class. Neither airline operates a true first class in 2026 in the modern sense.
- Winner: Premium Economy hardware
- EVA Air / 4th-gen seat with 107 cm / 42 in pitch
- Winner: Business class consistency
- EVA Air / Royal Laurel uniform across fleet
- Winner: Economy meal service
- Slight edge to EVA Air / consistently better-rated
- Winner: Skytrax rating
- EVA Air / 5-star vs 4-star
Which airline is safer and more reliable?
EVA Air has the materially cleaner safety record. Both airlines maintain IOSA certification, and both are generally regarded as reliable operators out of Taoyuan.
Safety. EVA Air has not had a fatal accident in its history. China Airlines has had several fatal incidents in its earlier decades, with significant improvements in safety culture and operations over the past 20 years. Both airlines hold IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) certification, which is the industry-standard safety benchmark. For travelers selecting on safety alone, EVA Air has the cleaner historical record. China Airlines’ modern record is strong, but the historical incidents remain part of public memory.
On-time performance. Neither Taiwanese carrier appears in Cirium’s published full-year 2025 Asia-Pacific top ten, and Cirium does not publish a clean full-year on-time figure for either airline, so a precise annual percentage is not available on a comparable basis. Both are generally regarded as solid operators, helped by Taoyuan’s reliable operating environment, but neither sits in the regional top tier that the Japanese and Philippine carriers occupy.
Cancellation rate. Both airlines run low cancellation rates compared to global averages, supported by Taoyuan’s reliable operating environment.
- Winner: historical safety record
- EVA Air / no fatal accidents in carrier history
- Winner: modern safety standards
- Tie / both IOSA certified
- Winner: on-time performance
- Tie / no clean full-year Cirium figure for either; both solid, neither in regional top tier
- Winner: cancellation rate
- Tie / both low
Which airline has a broader network?
China Airlines, by destination count. EVA Air has more US gateways. China Airlines is stronger in Oceania. EVA Air is stronger in Europe and North America.
China Airlines. Serves around 90 destinations from Taipei across all six inhabited continents. North America includes Los Angeles, Ontario (CA), San Francisco, Houston, Seattle, and New York. Europe includes London Gatwick, Frankfurt, Rome, Vienna, Amsterdam, and Prague. Asia is dense across Northeast and Southeast Asia. Oceania coverage is strong with Auckland, Brisbane, Sydney, and Melbourne, often beating EVA Air on frequency.
EVA Air. Serves around 45 destinations in total, with a more focused long-haul list: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Houston, New York-JFK, Chicago, and Miami in North America; London Heathrow, Vienna, Munich, Milan, Amsterdam, and Paris (seasonal) in Europe. Miami is the most differentiated US gateway, with limited competition from other Asian carriers. Asia coverage is denser than the network total suggests because EVA’s subsidiary UNI Air feeds regional cities.
Star Alliance vs SkyTeam onward connections. From Taipei, an EVA Air ticket connects naturally onto United (US domestic), Lufthansa (Europe), Singapore (SE Asia), ANA (Japan), Air Canada (Canada), and Thai (Bangkok). A China Airlines ticket connects naturally onto Delta (US domestic), Air France-KLM (Europe), Korean Air (Korea), and Garuda (Indonesia). For US travelers connecting to a Star Alliance metal carrier on the US side, EVA Air is the cleaner end-to-end experience. For SkyTeam travelers, China Airlines.
A350-1000 fleet plans. Both airlines have committed to the A350-1000. EVA Air has 24 on order starting deliveries in 2026 to replace older 777-300ERs. China Airlines has 15 on order. The A350-1000 is the platform that will define both carriers’ premium cabin offerings through the late 2020s.
- Winner: total destinations
- China Airlines / ~90 vs ~45
- Winner: US gateway count
- EVA Air / 7 cities including Miami
- Winner: Oceania frequency
- China Airlines
- Winner: Europe coverage
- Tie / both serve major European hubs
- Winner: A350-1000 fleet order
- EVA Air / 24 vs 15
Is Infinity MileageLands or Dynasty Flyer a better loyalty program?
Infinity MileageLands has the materially better US transfer partner access via Citi ThankYou. Dynasty Flyer has no US credit card transfer partner. Both run promotional bonus mile offers.
Infinity MileageLands (EVA Air). Star Alliance program with status earning across 26 partner airlines. Citibank ThankYou is the only US credit card transfer partner, which limits transfer flexibility but is a viable accumulation path for US-based members. Status tiers Green, Silver, and Gold; Gold confers Star Alliance Gold benefits. The program has historically been viewed as one of Asia’s best for Royal Laurel business class redemptions and Star Alliance partner award flights. Current 2026 promotion: up to 5,000 bonus Status Miles for international flights.
Dynasty Flyer (China Airlines). SkyTeam program. No US credit card transfer partners are available unless you hold a Taiwanese credit card. Status tiers Elite, Premium Elite, and Paragon. Elite Plus is the SkyTeam reciprocity tier. The program improved its operational accessibility in 2026, no longer requiring fax or email to enable online services. Current 2026 promotion: up to 5,000 bonus miles for international flights.
Practical decision. For US-based travelers accumulating points across credit cards, Infinity MileageLands is meaningfully more usable than Dynasty Flyer because of the Citi transfer relationship. For SkyTeam loyalists already earning Delta SkyMiles or Air France-KLM Flying Blue, Dynasty Flyer can earn into the same alliance ecosystem with status reciprocity. For travelers who do not credit-card-collect and only earn through flying, both programs are usable on their own metal but Infinity MileageLands’ Star Alliance partner depth is the bigger redemption upside.
- Winner: US credit card transfer partners
- EVA Air Infinity MileageLands / Citi ThankYou
- Winner: alliance partner depth
- EVA Air Infinity MileageLands / Star Alliance 26 carriers
- Winner: operational accessibility
- Slight edge to EVA Air / no longer requires fax/email
- Winner: promotional bonus structure
- Tie / both run 5,000 bonus mile offers
Who Should Pick China Airlines
- You are flying to Australia, New Zealand, or another Oceania destination from Taipei where China Airlines runs more frequencies
- You collect SkyTeam status with Delta, Air France-KLM, Korean Air, or Garuda
- You want the broadest possible Taiwan-based network at around 90 destinations
- You need to redeem on China Airlines metal from a SkyTeam program like Delta SkyMiles or Flying Blue
- Your Premium Economy seat preferences are flexible and you do not need the latest fourth-generation hardware
- You hold a Taiwanese credit card and can transfer points into Dynasty Flyer
- You are flying a route where China Airlines has a unique nonstop that EVA Air does not duplicate
Who Should Pick EVA Air
- You are booking Premium Economy on long-haul and want the fourth-generation seat with 107 cm / 42 in pitch (launched February 2025, expanding through 2029)
- You collect Star Alliance status with United, Singapore, ANA, Lufthansa, Air Canada, or Thai
- You hold Citi ThankYou points and want a usable credit card transfer partner for Asian premium awards
- You are flying to Miami, Chicago, or any of EVA Air’s distinctive US gateways
- You value the 5-star Skytrax rating and the cleaner historical safety record
- You are booking Royal Laurel business class and want the most consistently deployed lie-flat product across the fleet
- You want the airline most likely to deploy the A350-1000 to your route earliest (24 on order vs China Airlines’ 15)
The Bottom Line
EVA Air is the default-better airline in 2026. The 5-star Skytrax rating, the cleaner safety record, the fourth-generation Premium Economy seat that no other Asian carrier matches at this pitch and IFE generation, the more consistent Royal Laurel business class, the broader US credit card transfer partner access via Citi ThankYou, and the deeper Star Alliance partner network all stack on the same side. For travelers without a structural reason to prefer SkyTeam, EVA Air is the right pick.
China Airlines is the structural pick for two specific traveler profiles. The first is the SkyTeam loyalist who already earns into Delta SkyMiles or Air France-KLM Flying Blue and wants to redeem on Taiwan-based metal without changing alliance ecosystems. The second is the traveler whose specific Asia-Pacific route is served more conveniently or more frequently by China Airlines, which happens most often on Australia and New Zealand routings.
Both airlines are mid-modernization. China Airlines’ 15 A350-1000s plus 16 Boeing widebodies and EVA Air’s 24 A350-1000s plus 13 incoming 787 deliveries through 2029 will reset the cabin baseline on both carriers by the late 2020s. The Taiwan flag carrier comparison in 2030 may look meaningfully different from the 2026 comparison. As of now, EVA Air leads, and the gap is widest in Premium Economy.
For more Asia-Pacific premium context, see EVA Air vs Thai Airways, Japan Airlines vs EVA Air, and Korean Air vs Japan Airlines.
Frequently asked questions
Is China Airlines or EVA Air better in 2026?
Are China Airlines and EVA Air in the same alliance?
Which airline has better Premium Economy, China Airlines or EVA Air?
Which airline has better business class, China Airlines or EVA Air?
Which airline has more US destinations, China Airlines or EVA Air?
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Last verified Jun 2026 against official China Airlines and EVA Air policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.