Korean Air vs Japan Airlines 2026: JAL Cabin, Korean Reach
JAL wins business class (A350 Suites) and the widest 787 economy seat at 18.5 in; Korean Air wins network scale and premium carry-on. Alliance often decides.
Quick verdict
Korean Air wins on premium cabin carry-on (18 kg combined in Prestige/First vs 10 kg on JAL), carry-on dimension flexibility (115 cm linear sum vs JAL's fixed 55x40x25 cm box), network scale after the Asiana merger (one of Asia's largest fleets, 11 US gateways), and fixed SKYPASS award charts with outsized first class redemption value. JAL wins on business class hardware (JAL Suite sliding-door suites on A350-1000 to JFK/LAX/DFW), economy seat width (18.5 inches on the 787, widest in the industry), on-time performance, and easier US credit card mile earning through Bilt, Capital One, and Marriott Bonvoy transfers. Both cap economy carry-on at 10 kg and include 2 free checked bags on transpacific economy. Alliance loyalty often decides: Korean Air is SkyTeam (Delta), JAL is oneworld (American).
| Spec | Korean Air | Japan Airlines |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 21.7 x 15.7 x 7.9" | 21.7 x 15.7 x 9.8" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 55 x 40 x 20 cm | 55 x 40 x 25 cm |
| Carry-on weight | 10 kg (22 lb) | 10 kg (22 lb) |
| Carry-on fee | Free | Free |
| Personal item | Not published | Not published |
| 1st checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| 2nd checked bag | $0 | $0 |
| Basic economy | Not restricted | Not restricted |
| Gate-check risk | Low | Low |
Korean Air and Japan Airlines are two of Asia’s finest full-service carriers, and both compete directly for the US-to-Asia traveler. Korean Air operates from Seoul Incheon with nonstop service to 11 American cities, backed by one of Asia’s largest fleets after absorbing Asiana Airlines. Japan Airlines flies from Tokyo Haneda and Narita to 8 US gateways, deploying its acclaimed A350-1000 with JAL Suite business class on flagship transpacific routes. Both airlines deliver a level of service, meal quality, and cabin polish that makes most Western carriers feel like a downgrade.
The short answer: JAL wins on business class hardware (JAL Suite sliding-door suites on the A350-1000), economy seat width (the widest 787 economy seats in aviation), and on-time consistency. Korean Air wins on network scale after the Asiana merger, premium cabin carry-on weight (18 kg combined vs 10 kg on JAL), and the fixed SKYPASS award chart that delivers outsized value on premium cabin redemptions. Both include two free checked bags on transpacific economy fares, and both provide complimentary meals, alcohol, and seatback entertainment across all cabins. Your alliance loyalty, SkyTeam (Delta) versus oneworld (American), may be the deciding factor.
What We Looked For
- Business class product, where JAL Suite and Korean Air’s Prestige Suites 2.0 represent different philosophies
- Economy class comfort, including seat pitch, seat width, and meal quality on long transpacific flights
- Carry-on and checked bag policies, a real differentiator in premium cabin weight allowances
- On-time performance, where Japanese carriers have a well-earned reputation
- Transpacific route network, focusing on US city coverage and connection options
- Loyalty programs, SKYPASS versus JAL Mileage Bank for US-based frequent flyers
- The Asiana merger factor, which reshapes Korean Air’s competitive position in 2026
Bags and Fees Head-to-Head
Both airlines include two free checked bags on transpacific economy fares. The differences are in carry-on weight and premium cabin allowances.
| Feature | Korean Air | Japan Airlines |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on dimensions | 55 x 40 x 20 cm (115 cm linear total) | 55 x 40 x 25 cm |
| Carry-on weight (Economy) | 10 kg combined (carry-on + personal item) | 10 kg combined (carry-on + personal item) |
| Personal item | Yes, handbag/laptop bag | Yes, handbag/laptop bag |
| Prestige/Business carry-on | 2 pieces, 18 kg combined | 1 piece + personal item, 10 kg combined |
| First class carry-on | 2 pieces, 18 kg combined | 1 piece + personal item, 10 kg combined |
| Free checked bags (Economy, transpacific) | 2 x 23 kg | 2 x 23 kg |
| Economy Saver checked bags | 1 x 23 kg | N/A (JAL does not sell a heavily restricted basic economy) |
| Max checked bag weight | 32 kg / 70 lb | 32 kg / 70 lb |
In premium cabins, Korean Air’s allowance pulls noticeably ahead. Prestige (business) and First class passengers get two carry-on bags with a combined 18 kg limit. JAL keeps the same 10 kg combined cap across all cabins on standard international flights. If you travel with a heavy laptop bag plus a full carry-on roller, Korean Air’s premium cabin allowance gives you 80% more weight overhead.
Korean Air’s linear measurement approach (115 cm total) is also more flexible than JAL’s fixed box dimensions (55 x 40 x 25 cm). A taller or deeper bag that exceeds 25 cm in one dimension can still clear Korean Air’s policy if the total linear measurement stays under 115 cm.
On checked bags, both are generous by global standards. Two free bags at 23 kg each on transpacific routes is the norm for both carriers. The one catch: Korean Air’s Economy Saver fare (their most restrictive ticket) includes only one checked bag, while JAL does not sell a heavily restricted basic economy fare and includes two bags on all international economy tickets.
- Winner: carry-on weight (Economy)
- Tie / both cap Economy at 10 kg combined (carry-on plus personal item)
- Winner: premium cabin carry-on
- Korean Air / 18 kg combined for 2 bags vs 10 kg combined for 1 bag + personal item
- Winner: checked bags on cheapest fare
- JAL / 2 bags on all fares vs 1 bag on Korean Air Economy Saver
- Winner: carry-on dimension flexibility
- Korean Air / linear sum vs fixed box
Seats and Comfort
JAL has the newer business class hardware with sliding-door suites. Korean Air is catching up with Prestige Suites 2.0 but has wider deployment of older products on many routes.
Business Class
JAL Suite (A350-1000). Fully enclosed suites with translucent sliding doors in a 1-2-1 configuration (54 Business seats per aircraft). Direct aisle access for every passenger, a 24-inch personal screen, and a full-flat bed up to 198 cm (78 in). JAL deploys the A350-1000 on transpacific routes to New York JFK, Los Angeles, and Dallas-Fort Worth (plus London Heathrow and Paris Charles de Gaulle), with 11 of its 13 ordered A350-1000s in the fleet as of March 2026 and the rest arriving through 2028. Reviewers have ranked JAL Suite among the best business class products in the world. The sliding doors provide genuine privacy on par with Qatar Airways Qsuite and Singapore Airlines’ latest cabins.
Korean Air Prestige Suites 2.0 (787-10). A 1-2-1 suite with 132 cm (52-inch)-high seat walls for privacy (tall partitions rather than a sliding door), a 46-inch pitch that converts to a 78.2 to 79.2 inch (198 to 201 cm) flat bed, a 21-inch-wide seat, a 23.8-inch UHD monitor, wireless charging plus 60W USB-C, and direct aisle access for every seat. This is a strong product, but the tall walls do not enclose like JAL Suite’s door. The 787-10 serves select routes, while many transpacific flights still use the 777-300ER with the older Prestige product featuring angled-flat seats in a 2-2-2 layout.
Korean Air Kosmo Suites 2.0 (747-8/A380 First Class). For travelers in first class, Korean Air’s Kosmo Suites offer enclosed suites with closing doors and lie-flat beds on the 747-8 and A380. These aircraft are being retained longer than originally planned due to new delivery delays, with A380s now expected to fly “well into the 2030s.”
| JAL Suite (A350-1000) | Korean Air Prestige Suites 2.0 (787-10) | |
|---|---|---|
| Layout | 1-2-1, all-aisle access | 1-2-1, all-aisle access |
| Privacy | Fully enclosed translucent sliding door | 52-in (132 cm) high walls, no door |
| Bed | Up to 198 cm / 78 in flat | 78 to 79 in / 198 to 201 cm flat |
| Pitch / width | Suite footprint | 46-in pitch, 21-in wide |
| Screen | Large personal screen | 23.8-inch UHD |
| Charging | In-seat power | Wireless plus 60W USB-C |
| Older fleet | New product fleet-wide on A350-1000 | 777-300ER still 2-2-2 angled-flat |
| First Class | 6 suites on A350-1000 | Kosmo Suites 2.0 (747-8 / A380) |
- Winner: business class hardware
- JAL / fully enclosed sliding-door Suite vs Korean's high walls
- Winner: first class product
- Korean Air / Kosmo Suites 2.0 on 747-8/A380
- Winner: business class technology
- Korean Air Prestige Suites 2.0 / wireless charging, 23.8-inch UHD, 60W USB-C
Economy Class
Both airlines provide a transpacific economy experience that exceeds what most Western carriers offer. Complimentary Japanese and Korean cuisine, complimentary alcohol (including sake, soju, and beer), seatback entertainment screens, and attentive service are standard on both.
Seat pitch: Korean Air offers 84 to 86 cm (33 to 34 in) on widebody aircraft and about 81 cm (32 in) on 787s. JAL offers approximately 86 cm (34 in) on international widebody aircraft. Both are above the industry average of 79 to 81 cm (31 to 32 in).
Seat width: This is where JAL pulls ahead. JAL installs 8-abreast economy seating on its Boeing 787 fleet, producing 47 cm (18.5 in)-wide seats. Korean Air and most other carriers use 9-abreast on the 787, resulting in seats roughly 43 to 46 cm (17 to 18 in) wide. JAL won Skytrax’s Best Economy Class Seat award in 2025, with Korean Air ranking third.
IFE: Both provide seatback screens with extensive content libraries. Korean Air’s system includes Korean and international programming. JAL’s system includes Japanese content and a growing international selection.
- Winner: economy seat width
- JAL / 18.5 inches on 787, widest in industry
- Winner: economy seat pitch
- Tie / both 33-34 inches on widebody
- Winner: economy meal quality
- Tie / both serve excellent cuisine reflective of their home countries
Premium Economy
JAL’s Sky Premium seats are established on 787-9 and 777-300ER aircraft, offering enhanced recline, large legrests, adjustable footrests, center privacy dividers, and charging ports.
Korean Air announced its entry into premium economy in 2025, with the first retrofitted aircraft expected in service during the second half of 2025 and the program extending into 2026. This is a newer product still rolling out.
- Winner: Premium Economy availability
- JAL / established product on multiple aircraft types
On-Time Performance
Japanese carriers have earned their reputation for punctuality. JAL consistently ranks among the top performers in Asia-Pacific.
JAL finished full-year 2025 at 78.25 percent on-time arrivals per Cirium’s full-year 2025 review, keeping it among the most punctual carriers in Asia-Pacific. JAL had earned the title of most punctual airline in Asia-Pacific for 2024 before Philippine Airlines took the regional crown in 2025.
Korean Air does not publish a full-year Cirium headline figure, and it did not appear in Cirium’s full-year 2025 Asia-Pacific top ten, so a direct annual on-time number is not available on a comparable basis. The carrier is generally regarded as operationally solid, but its punctuality is not documented with the granularity of the Japanese flag carriers.
Both airlines operate from hub airports that function well. Tokyo Haneda and Narita are known for efficient ground operations. Seoul Incheon consistently ranks among the world’s best airports and is a reliably smooth connection point.
- Winner: documented on-time record
- JAL / 78.25% full-year 2025; Cirium #1 Asia-Pacific 2024
- Winner: hub airport experience
- Tie / both Incheon and Haneda/Narita are consistently top-ranked
Route Network
Korean Air covers more US cities nonstop from Seoul. JAL offers deeper connectivity within Japan and to its partner network through oneworld.
Korean Air US destinations (nonstop from Seoul Incheon): Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Honolulu, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York JFK, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington Dulles. That is 11 US gateways.
JAL US destinations (nonstop from Tokyo): New York JFK, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Seattle, Boston, and Honolulu. That is 8 US gateways, with the A350-1000 prioritized on JFK, LAX, and DFW.
Korean Air’s advantage grows further after the Asiana integration. The combined fleet and absorption of Asiana’s route rights (where not divested to competitors) creates one of Asia’s largest carriers. Some overlapping transpacific routes, including LAX and SFO, were transferred to competitors like Air Premia as a regulatory condition. But the combined Korean Air still operates the most nonstop US-Korea frequencies of any carrier.
JAL’s strength beyond the nonstop US cities is domestic Japan connectivity. If your final destination is Osaka, Sapporo, Fukuoka, Okinawa, or any of dozens of smaller Japanese cities, JAL’s domestic network from Haneda and Narita provides smooth same-airline connections. Korean Air requires a separate booking or codeshare for connections within Japan.
For connections beyond the hub, alliance matters. Korean Air is SkyTeam, connecting to Delta’s domestic US network and partners like Air France, KLM, and Garuda Indonesia for onward travel. JAL is oneworld, connecting to American Airlines’ domestic US network and partners like British Airways, Cathay Pacific, and Qantas.
- Winner: US nonstop coverage
- Korean Air / 11 US gateways vs 8
- Winner: domestic Japan connections
- JAL
- Winner: Southeast Asia connections
- Korean Air / Seoul Incheon is a natural hub for SE Asia routing
- Winner: oneworld alliance travelers
- JAL / American, BA, Cathay Pacific, Qantas
- Winner: SkyTeam alliance travelers
- Korean Air / Delta, Air France, KLM
Loyalty Programs
SKYPASS rewards patience with outsized first class redemptions. JAL Mileage Bank rewards accessibility with easier earning from US credit cards.
Korean Air SKYPASS
SKYPASS uses a fixed award chart, which is increasingly rare among major airlines. While Delta, United, and others have moved to dynamic pricing, Korean Air still publishes set mileage prices by route and cabin. A first class Kosmo Suite seat from Seoul to New York costs 80,000 SKYPASS miles off-peak, a redemption that can deliver 15 cents per mile in value when the cash fare exceeds $12,000.
The catch: earning SKYPASS miles is harder for US-based travelers than it used to be. Korean Air parted ways with Chase transfer partnerships, and the Marriott Bonvoy transfer option also ended. The primary US earning path is through Korean Air’s co-branded Visa cards issued by U.S. Bank (up to 60,000 bonus miles on signup). Without those cards, accumulating SKYPASS miles requires flying Korean Air or SkyTeam partners.
SKYPASS tiers: Silver (50,000 qualifying miles), Gold (100,000), Platinum (150,000), Million Miler Club. The “Peak” calendar now covers approximately 40% of the year, making off-peak award availability more competitive.
JAL Mileage Bank
JAL Mileage Bank also uses a distance-based award chart with published pricing. Mile value averages approximately 1.5 cents per mile.
The earning advantage for US travelers is significant. JAL Mileage Bank is a transfer partner of Bilt Rewards (1:1 ratio), Capital One Miles (2:1.5 ratio), and Marriott Bonvoy (3:1 with a 5,000-mile bonus per 60,000 points). Bilt points in particular transfer instantly at 1:1, making JAL one of the most accessible Asian airline programs for US credit card users.
JAL Mileage Bank also offers competitive domestic Japan award pricing, useful for travelers planning multi-city Japan trips. Oneworld partner access through American, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, and Qantas extends redemption flexibility across multiple continents.
Miles in both programs expire after 3 years from the date of earning.
- Winner: redemption ceiling (premium cabins)
- SKYPASS / fixed chart, 15 cents/mile possible on first class
- Winner: mile earning from US credit cards
- JAL Mileage Bank / Bilt 1:1, Capital One, Marriott Bonvoy
- Winner: domestic Japan awards
- JAL Mileage Bank
- Winner: award chart stability
- Tie / both use fixed/distance-based charts, both stable through 2026
Who Should Pick Korean Air
- You fly SkyTeam and earn Delta SkyMiles or partner miles
- You want the most US nonstop options from a single Asian carrier (11 cities)
- You travel in Prestige or First and value the 18 kg carry-on weight allowance
- You hold Korean Air co-branded US Bank Visa cards and earn SKYPASS directly
- You want first class Kosmo Suites 2.0 on the 747-8 or A380, bookable at fixed award prices
- You are connecting through Seoul to Southeast Asia, China, or other Asian destinations
- You prefer Seoul Incheon as a transit hub (consistently rated among the world’s best airports)
- You are also considering Middle Eastern carriers; see our Emirates vs Qatar Airways comparison for another premium long-haul option
Who Should Pick Japan Airlines
- You fly oneworld and earn AAdvantage, Avios, or Asia Miles
- You want JAL Suite sliding-door business class on the A350-1000 to JFK, LAX, or DFW
- You value the widest economy seat in the 787 fleet (18.5 inches, 8-abreast)
- You earn transferable points through Bilt (1:1), Capital One, or Marriott Bonvoy for JAL Mileage Bank
- You are connecting to domestic Japan destinations (Osaka, Sapporo, Fukuoka, Okinawa)
- You prioritize on-time performance, where JAL posts a documented full-year Cirium figure (78.25 percent in 2025) and won Asia-Pacific punctuality in 2024
- You want an established Premium Economy product on transpacific routes
- You are weighing JAL against ANA as well; see our ANA vs Japan Airlines comparison
The Bottom Line
Korean Air and Japan Airlines are both elite carriers that outperform the vast majority of airlines on any transpacific route. You will eat well, sit comfortably, and receive attentive service on either one. The differences are real but come down to what you value most.
Korean Air is the scale play. After absorbing Asiana, it offers the widest US nonstop network of any Asian carrier, the most generous premium cabin carry-on allowance, and a SKYPASS program whose fixed award chart delivers some of the best first class redemption values in aviation. The 787-10 Prestige Suites 2.0 is a strong next-generation product, even if it trails JAL Suite on privacy. Seoul Incheon is a smooth, pleasant hub. If you are SkyTeam-loyal and value network reach, Korean Air is the pick.
JAL is the refinement play. The A350-1000 JAL Suite is the best business class product on any US-Japan route today, with translucent sliding doors and direct aisle access. The 787 economy cabin has the widest seats in the industry. On-time performance is consistently top-tier. And JAL Mileage Bank is far easier to fund from US credit cards than SKYPASS, thanks to Bilt and Capital One transfer partnerships. If you are oneworld-loyal, flying to Japan specifically, or want the newest premium hardware, JAL is the pick.
Alliance loyalty will settle it for many travelers. Korean Air connects to Delta. JAL connects to American. Whichever frequent flyer program holds your miles, that is likely your airline. For everyone else: fly Korean Air for the network and the Kosmo Suite redemption. Fly JAL for the cabin and the convenience of earning miles.
If you are comparing other premium Asian and Middle Eastern carriers, see our Emirates vs Singapore Airlines comparison for a different take on the long-haul luxury market, or ANA vs Japan Airlines for a direct JAL alternative.
Frequently asked questions
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Does Korean Air or JAL have better business class?
Which airline has more legroom, Korean Air or JAL?
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How does the Korean Air-Asiana merger affect travelers in 2026?
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Last verified Jun 2026 against official Korean Air and Japan Airlines policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.