Japan Airlines vs EVA Air 2026: oneworld or Star Alliance?
JAL added private business class rooms on the A350-1000 across five long-haul routes. EVA debuted industry-leading 42-inch premium economy pitch. Alliances compared.
On this page
- Quick verdict
- Side-by-side specs
- What I weighed for this comparison
- Is JAL A350-1000 or EVA Royal Laurel bet...
- Premium economy: EVA Air leads with the ...
- Carry-on cabin allowance: JAL is the mor...
- Alliance choice: oneworld via JAL or Sta...
- Hub experience: Tokyo vs Taipei
- US route coverage by JAL versus EVA Air
- Who should pick Japan Airlines
- Who should pick EVA Air
- The Bottom Line
- FAQ
- Go deeper
- Related
Quick verdict
JAL wins on cabin allowance for shorter loads (10 kg combined cabin vs EVA's 7 kg on the carry-on alone), on the new A350-1000 business class with fully private rooms (11 aircraft in the fleet as of March 2026, serving JFK, LAX, DFW, LHR, and CDG, with ORD/SFO likely next), and on oneworld alliance access (American Airlines, British Airways, Qatar, Iberia, Alaska Airlines). EVA Air wins on premium economy pitch (industry-leading 42 inches on the fourth-generation seat launched February 2025 on the 787-9), on Royal Laurel business class consistency on every 777-300ER, on operational steadiness (EVA ran continuously while several peers spent the same period in restructuring), and on Star Alliance access (United, Lufthansa Group, Singapore, ANA). The alliance split is the structural decision; the cabin product picks JAL on business class today and EVA on premium economy today.
| Spec | Japan Airlines | EVA Air |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 21.7 x 15.7 x 9.8" | 22 x 14 x 9" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 55 x 40 x 25 cm | 56 x 36 x 23 cm |
| Carry-on weight | 10 kg (22 lb) | 7 kg (15 lb) |
| Carry-on fee | Free | Free |
| Personal item | Not published | 16 x 12 x 4" |
| 1st checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| 2nd checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| Basic economy | Not restricted | Not restricted |
| Gate-check risk | Low | Medium |
JAL added fully private business class rooms when the A350-1000 entered service in January 2024 on the Tokyo Haneda to New York JFK route. As of March 2026 JAL has 11 A350-1000s in the fleet, flying the cabin to JFK, LAX, DFW, LHR, and CDG. EVA Air kept the Royal Laurel business class on the 777-300ER and made its bet on premium economy instead: in February 2025 EVA launched the fourth-generation premium economy seat with a published 42-inch pitch on the 787-9. Two airlines, two different responses to the same Asia-to-US competitive pressure, on opposite sides of the global alliance divide.
Short version: JAL wins on the newest business class hard product flying today (A350-1000 with private rooms vs EVA’s Royal Laurel without doors), on the more generous Economy cabin allowance (10 kg combined cabin vs EVA’s 7 kg on the carry-on alone), and on oneworld alliance access. EVA wins on premium economy pitch by a clear margin (42 inches industry-leading), on operational steadiness, and on Star Alliance access. The alliance split (oneworld vs Star Alliance) is the structural decision; the cabin product picks JAL today on business class and EVA today on premium economy.
What I weighed for this comparison
Both carriers are top-tier Asian premium operators, both fly transpacific, both have strong cabin products. The criteria need to focus on what actually decides the booking:
- Business class hard product available right now, where JAL A350-1000 leads on full door enclosure
- Premium economy pitch and seat technology, where EVA’s fourth-generation seat leads
- Cabin baggage rules in Economy, where JAL’s combined-weight 10 kg allowance is materially more generous
- Alliance choice for redemption and status, with JAL on oneworld and EVA on Star Alliance
- Hub experience at Haneda and Narita versus Taipei
- US route coverage by aircraft type, since JAL’s A350-1000 is on specific routes only
- Loyalty program mechanics (Mileage Bank vs Infinity MileageLands)
Is JAL A350-1000 or EVA Royal Laurel better business class right now?
JAL on the A350-1000 has the newer product with full door enclosure. EVA Royal Laurel is consistent across every 777-300ER but lacks the door.
JAL Airbus A350-1000 entered service January 24, 2024 on Haneda-JFK. The aircraft carries 54 business class seats and 6 First Class suites in a layout that prioritizes premium cabins. Each business class seat is a fully private room with a sliding door, 1-2-1 configuration with direct aisle access, fully-flat bed, and the new JAL Sky Suite cabin design. As of March 31, 2026, JAL’s corporate fleet report lists 11 A350-1000s, with the full 13-aircraft order completing by 2028. Routes flown by A350-1000 as of mid-2026: Haneda-JFK (two daily), Haneda-LAX, Haneda-DFW, Haneda-LHR, and Haneda-CDG. Chicago (ORD) and San Francisco (SFO) are the likely next deployments as additional aircraft arrive.
EVA Air Royal Laurel is the established 1-2-1 reverse-herringbone product on every 777-300ER in the fleet, with adjustable privacy panels (not full doors), 18-inch HD touchscreens, lie-flat beds, and built-in storage cabinets. Royal Laurel is the proven, consistent business class across EVA’s transpacific fleet, but the product is several years old and the gap with the newer A350-1000 cabins (JAL’s A350-1000, Cathay’s Aria Suite, Korean’s Prestige Suites 2.0) is real on privacy enclosure.
For a Tokyo-to-US route that flies the A350-1000, JAL is the materially better business class product. For an EVA Air transpacific route from Taipei, Royal Laurel is the consistent and well-rated option but lacks the recent privacy upgrades.
| JAL A350-1000 | EVA Royal Laurel | |
|---|---|---|
| Aircraft | Airbus A350-1000 (5 routes) | Boeing 777-300ER (whole long-haul fleet) |
| Layout | 1-2-1 enclosed suite | 1-2-1 reverse-herringbone |
| Privacy | Translucent sliding door (~62 in wall) | Adjustable privacy panels, no door |
| Bed | About 203 cm / 80 in flat | About 193 cm / 76 in flat |
| Seat pitch | Suite footprint ~211 cm / 83 in | 43 in |
| Screen | Personal screen, headrest speakers | 18-inch HD touchscreen |
| First Class same cabin | Yes, 6 suites | None |
| Consistency | Only on A350-1000 routes | Every 777-300ER |
The split is privacy versus predictability: JAL gives you a doored suite and a First option, but only where the A350-1000 flies; EVA gives you the same well-regarded open suite on every long-haul jet.
- Winner: business class hard product on routes that fly the new aircraft
- JAL A350-1000 / fully private rooms with sliding doors
- Winner: consistency of business class across the fleet
- EVA Royal Laurel / every 777-300ER is the same product; JAL's A350-1000 is only 5 routes
- Winner: First Class option
- JAL A350-1000 / 6 First Class suites per aircraft on A350-1000; EVA Royal Laurel does not offer First Class
- Winner: screen size in business class
- Tie, effectively / 18-inch on EVA Royal Laurel vs comparable on JAL Sky Suite
Premium economy: EVA Air leads with the 42-inch fourth-generation seat
EVA Air launched the fourth-generation premium economy seat in February 2025 with a published 42-inch pitch, which industry reporting consistently rates as one of the longest premium economy pitches in commercial aviation. The seat debuted on the Boeing 787-9 and is rolling out across EVA’s 787-9 transpacific routes (San Francisco-Taipei from March 2026, with the new Taipei-Washington DC service launching with the three-class 787-9). Recline is equivalent to 8 inches without impinging on the passenger behind, per EVA’s product disclosure. The cabin sits 2-3-2 on the 787-9, with personal entertainment screen, amenity kit, hot meal service with choice of main, and priority boarding.
JAL premium economy on the A350-1000 and other widebodies is competitive but not differentiated. The JAL premium economy product is a Recaro-built seat at around 38 inches of pitch in 2-4-2 (on 777s) or 2-3-2 (on A350-1000) layout, with personal screen, amenity kit, and hot meal service. The seat is well-reviewed but the published pitch is materially shorter than EVA’s 42-inch fourth-generation product.
For a 12-14 hour transpacific flight, the 4-inch pitch difference between EVA’s 42-inch and JAL’s 38-inch is real and felt. EVA wins this category for travelers willing to fly via Taipei.
- Winner: published premium economy seat pitch
- EVA Air / 42 inches industry-leading on fourth-generation seat
- Winner: premium economy fleet coverage
- EVA Air / fourth-generation seat rolling out across the 787-9 transpacific fleet
- Winner: premium economy cabin design and amenities
- Tie / both well-reviewed at the trim level
- Winner: premium economy meal service
- Tie / both offer hot meal and choice of main
Carry-on cabin allowance: JAL is the more generous airline
JAL Economy cabin allowance is 10 kg combined across the carry-on (55 by 40 by 25 cm) and the personal item, with a 47-inch linear sum on aircraft with 100-plus seats. EVA caps the Economy carry-on at 7 kg, with a separate personal item that is not counted against that 7 kg. The two airlines weigh the cabin allowance differently: JAL applies a single 10 kg combined cap to the roller plus personal item, while EVA limits the main roller to 7 kg but lets the personal item ride free of that figure.
EVA Air Economy: a 7 kg carry-on in a 56 by 36 by 23 cm box, plus a personal item at 40 by 30 by 10 cm (the personal item is notably thin at only 10 cm depth, similar to AirAsia and Scoot in the regional Asia cluster).
JAL Economy: 10 kg combined cabin + personal item. The carry-on alone is generous at 55 by 40 by 25 cm.
For a single packed roller, JAL’s policy lets you fill it to 10 kg while EVA holds the roller to 7 kg, so JAL is more forgiving for a heavy main bag. EVA’s split allowance, on the other hand, helps travelers who carry a light roller but a heavy laptop or camera bag, since that personal item is not weighed against the carry-on limit.
Premium cabins reverse the relationship. EVA Royal Laurel allows 2 carry-on bags at 7 kg each plus a personal item, totaling 18 kg combined. JAL Business allows the same 10 kg combined cap as Economy. For travelers in business class with multiple bags, EVA Royal Laurel’s per-bag generosity beats JAL’s single-piece policy.
- Winner: Economy carry-on weight (single roller)
- JAL / 10 kg combined cap lets the roller hit 10 kg; EVA holds the roller to 7 kg
- Winner: carry-on bag template
- JAL / 55 by 40 by 25 cm with deeper bag profile
- Winner: personal item template strictness
- JAL / EVA's 40 by 30 by 10 cm is among the thinnest
- Winner: business class carry-on
- EVA Royal Laurel / 2 pieces at 7 kg each (18 kg combined) vs JAL's 10 kg single-piece cap
Alliance choice: oneworld via JAL or Star Alliance via EVA?
The structural decision for most travelers.
JAL is a oneworld member, which means partner award redemption spans American Airlines, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Finnair, Iberia, Qantas, Qatar Airways, Royal Jordanian, S7 Airlines, SriLankan Airlines, and (as of 2026) Alaska Airlines. The oneworld partnership particularly benefits travelers who collect British Airways Avios (which transfers from American Express, Chase, and Citi cards in the US at competitive ratios) and who want Qatar Qsuite access via Avios. JAL Mileage Bank operates with its own redemption math but the partner award charts are competitive.
EVA Air is a Star Alliance member with access to United, Lufthansa Group (Lufthansa, SWISS, Austrian), Air Canada, ANA, Air China, Singapore Airlines, Thai Airways, Turkish Airlines, and the broader 26-member set. Asiana is currently a Star Alliance member but will leave on December 17, 2026 when Korean Air’s absorption completes (Korean is SkyTeam). EVA Infinity MileageLands gives Diamond and Gold members priority boarding from May 1, 2026 onward and runs periodic mileage-purchase bonus offers of up to 35 percent, which is one of the better cash-to-miles arbitrages in Star Alliance.
For a US-based traveler who collects American Express Membership Rewards or has American Airlines status, oneworld via JAL is the natural fit. For a US-based traveler who collects United MileagePlus status or transfers via Chase Ultimate Rewards to United, Star Alliance via EVA is the natural fit. The choice is essentially which alliance you already collect in.
- Winner: oneworld partner network depth
- JAL / American, BA, Cathay, Qatar, Alaska (2026 addition)
- Winner: Star Alliance partner network depth
- EVA / United, Lufthansa Group, Singapore, Thai, Turkish, ANA
- Winner: US credit card transfer paths
- Tie / both have Amex Membership Rewards routes; JAL via Avios is broader
- Winner: premium cabin redemption value
- JAL / JAL First on A350-1000 + Qatar Qsuite via Avios are the standouts
- Winner: mileage-purchase arbitrage
- EVA / periodic 35% bonus offers on Infinity MileageLands
Hub experience: Tokyo vs Taipei
JAL operates primarily from Tokyo Haneda (HND) for international flights, with secondary operations at Narita. EVA Air operates from Taipei Taoyuan (TPE).
Tokyo Haneda is one of the world’s busiest airports, with a famously efficient operation and a transit experience close to central Tokyo (20 minutes on the Tokyo Monorail). HND is purpose-built for international business travelers and the JAL Sky Suite domestic-international connection is among the smoothest in Asia.
Taipei Taoyuan is the primary hub for EVA Air (which is based in Taipei). TPE is well-regarded as a transit airport with the airport MRT to central Taipei in 35 minutes for around 4 USD. The transit-through experience for international-to-international connections is fast (typically 60 minutes minimum connection time).
For a US traveler whose final destination is Japan, JAL via Haneda is the natural choice (no aircraft change needed, direct city-airport access). For a US traveler whose final destination is somewhere else in Asia (Singapore, Bangkok, Manila, Hong Kong, Vietnam, mainland China), EVA via Taipei can be competitive depending on the onward connection.
- Winner: transit speed at the connecting hub
- Taipei TPE / 60-minute minimum connection time; tighter than HND or NRT
- Winner: ground transit to city center
- Tokyo Haneda / 20-minute monorail
- Winner: stopover city quality
- Tokyo / Tokyo is one of the world's premier stopover destinations
- Winner: onward intra-Asia connection breadth
- Taipei TPE / EVA's network from TPE is built for the onward spoke routing
US route coverage by JAL versus EVA Air
JAL operates from Tokyo (HND and NRT) to:
- New York JFK (A350-1000 daily)
- Los Angeles LAX (A350-1000 daily)
- Dallas-Fort Worth DFW (A350-1000 daily)
- Chicago ORD (777-300ER; A350 likely future deployment)
- San Francisco SFO (777-300ER; A350 likely future deployment)
- Boston BOS
- Honolulu HNL
- Seattle SEA
- San Diego SAN
EVA Air operates nonstop from Taipei (TPE) to ten North American gateways:
- Los Angeles LAX
- San Francisco SFO
- Seattle SEA
- Houston IAH
- New York JFK
- Chicago ORD
- Dallas-Fort Worth DFW
- Washington DC IAD (launching June 26, 2026 on the three-class 787-9)
- Vancouver YVR (Canada)
- Toronto YYZ (Canada)
For a traveler whose Asian destination is Tokyo or onward to Japan, JAL is the natural pick. For a traveler whose Asian destination is Taipei or onward to broader Asia, EVA is the natural pick. Both airlines codeshare with US carriers via their respective alliances (JAL with American, EVA with United).
- Winner: US-to-Tokyo nonstop
- JAL / the only oneworld Tokyo-direct option for US travelers
- Winner: US-to-Taipei nonstop
- EVA Air / the only Star Alliance Taipei-direct option
- Winner: US-to-Hawaii (HNL)
- JAL / JAL operates HND-HNL; EVA does not fly Hawaii
- Winner: US-to-Southeast-Asia onward connection
- EVA Air / Taipei is the better onward hub for Southeast Asia than Tokyo
Who should pick Japan Airlines
- You are flying from the US to Tokyo or onward into Japan
- You want the newer business class with fully private rooms on the A350-1000 (now on five routes; JFK, LAX, DFW, LHR, CDG)
- You collect oneworld miles via American Airlines, British Airways Avios, or American Express Membership Rewards
- You travel with the heavier laptop kit and value JAL’s 10 kg combined cabin allowance
- You value the Haneda-to-central-Tokyo monorail (20 minutes) for the connecting hub experience
- You are flying long-haul to Hawaii on HND-HNL
- You are booking First Class on the A350-1000 (6 suites per aircraft, very hard to redeem with miles)
Who should pick EVA Air
- You are flying from the US to Taipei or onward into broader Asia (Bangkok, Manila, Singapore, Vietnam, mainland China)
- You want the industry-leading 42-inch premium economy pitch on the fourth-generation seat
- You collect Star Alliance miles via United MileagePlus, Lufthansa Miles and More, Singapore KrisFlyer, or Chase Ultimate Rewards
- You can take advantage of EVA’s periodic 35-percent mileage-purchase bonus offers
- You value Royal Laurel business class consistency on every 777-300ER (vs JAL’s mixed fleet outside A350-1000 routes)
- You are flying business class with two carry-on bags and value EVA’s 2-piece 18-kg cabin allowance
- You are based near Dallas-Fort Worth or Washington DC and want EVA’s nonstop to Taipei with onward Asia connections (the new IAD route launches June 26, 2026 on the three-class 787-9)
The Bottom Line
Japan Airlines and EVA Air are two of the best Asian premium carriers serving the US-to-Asia transpacific market, and the comparison comes down to alliance, route, and which cabin you are booking.
For business class on the newest available hard product, JAL on the A350-1000 wins. The fully private rooms with sliding doors are flying right now on JFK, LAX, DFW, LHR, and CDG, with ORD and SFO likely additions in 2026-2027. JAL Sky Suite on older 777-300ER is also good but lacks the door enclosure.
For premium economy, EVA Air’s 42-inch pitch fourth-generation seat is the standout in commercial aviation. The 4-inch advantage over JAL’s roughly 38-inch premium economy is material on a 12-14 hour flight.
For Economy carry-on, JAL’s 10 kg combined cabin allowance lets a single roller weigh up to 10 kg, while EVA holds the main roller to 7 kg but does not count the personal item against it. JAL is the more forgiving for a heavy main bag; EVA’s split allowance favors a light roller with a heavy laptop or camera bag. EVA’s premium-cabin baggage is the standout outside Economy (Royal Laurel allows 2 bags at 7 kg each, totaling 18 kg combined, more generous than JAL’s 10 kg flat cap across all classes).
For alliance choice, the structural fact is that JAL is oneworld and EVA is Star Alliance. Pick by the alliance you already collect in. American Airlines status holders and Avios collectors lean JAL. United status holders and Chase Ultimate Rewards collectors lean EVA.
For routing, JAL via Haneda is the cleanest US-to-Tokyo direct option. EVA via Taipei is the better US-to-onward-Asia routing.
Both airlines are well-rated, safe, and well-operated. The decision is mostly about which alliance, which cabin, and which onward destination. There is no wrong choice for the use case each carrier fits.
For more Asia-cohort context, see Singapore Airlines vs Cathay Pacific for the elite premium pair, EVA Air vs Thai Airways for another Star Alliance Asia matchup, or Korean Air vs Cathay Pacific for the SkyTeam-vs-oneworld Asia comparison. For the full per-airline baggage policies, see Japan Airlines carry-on size and EVA Air carry-on size.
Frequently asked questions
Is Japan Airlines or EVA Air better for the transpacific route in 2026?
What aircraft does JAL fly its new A350-1000 business class on?
Is EVA Air's fourth-generation premium economy worth the upgrade?
Is oneworld via JAL or Star Alliance via EVA the better loyalty program?
Which has better cabin baggage policy on Economy?
Go deeper on either airline
Browse more comparisons
Related guides
- GuideSouthwest vs Delta from Las Vegas 2026: Bags, Routes, BasicSouthwest dominates LAS with more daily flights than any other carrier. Delta brings premium cabins and SkyTeam reach. Which one wins out of Las Vegas in 2026.
- GuideWhich Airlines Accept a 55 x 40 x 25 cm Carry-On in 2026 (and the Best Bags That Fit)ANA, JAL, TAP, Aeromexico, Transavia and Viva Aerobus use the 55 x 40 x 25 cm cabin box. Here's the full airline list, the 10 kg weight caps, and verified bags that actually fit.
- GuideBA First vs Virgin Upper Class 2026: LHR-LAX Premium ComparedBA First and Virgin Upper Class are the two top premium cabins on London-LA in 2026. Which one wins on seat, lounge, chauffeur, and miles redemption.
- GuideFlying With a Baby: Practical Tips From Parents (2026)Real tips for flying with a baby in 2026: skip the red-eye, beat ear pressure, pack smart, decide lap infant vs a seat. Parent-tested, with gear that helps.
- GuideAre You Entitled to Flight Compensation? 2026 Decision GuideDelayed, cancelled, or bumped? Whether you're owed money depends on where your flight departed. A quick guide to EU261, UK261, and US DOT rules.
Related stories
- From the blogThe 2026 Baggage Fee Index: $0 to $140 for the Same TripAcross 47 airlines that publish a flat first-bag-trip fee, the round-trip spread runs $0 to $140. 29 include a carry-on plus a checked bag free. The US legacy carriers all sit at exactly $90.
- From the blogI Ranked 2025 Airline Reliability Two Ways. The Rankings Disagree.The most on-time airlines of 2025 were Latin American, not the luxury names. And the US carrier that cancels the most flights also runs the worst on-time rate.
- From the blogI Checked Basic Economy at 74 Airlines: The Personal-Item-Only Fare24 of 74 airlines give you a personal item and nothing else in their cheapest fare. Nine of them are full-service carriers, not budget airlines.
Last verified Jun 2026 against official Japan Airlines and EVA Air policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.