The carbon footprint of a flight in the US ranges from 0.296 tCO₂e for a short domestic round trip to 0.775 tCO₂e for a transatlantic round trip. All figures are economy class, ICAO-derived, and represent operational CO₂ only. Understanding what drives that range is more useful than a single average figure.
At a glance: emissions by route type
All values are round-trip, economy class, operational CO₂ only. Source: ICAO Carbon Emissions Calculator, consistent with Decarb methodology v2.2.
| Route type | Route | Round-trip (tCO₂e) | One-way (tCO₂e) | kg CO₂ per mile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short-haul | NYC ↔ Chicago | 0.296 | 0.148 | ~0.19 |
| Cross-country | NYC ↔ Los Angeles | 0.608 | 0.304 | ~0.12 |
| Long-haul | NYC ↔ Rome | 0.775 | 0.388 | ~0.09 |
Per-mile emissions decline as distance increases, but total emissions still rise. Short flights are the least efficient per mile.
Why emissions are not linear with distance
Flight emissions do not scale proportionally with distance because takeoff and climb consume disproportionate fuel relative to cruise. A 300-mile flight does not emit one-tenth of a 3,000-mile flight — it emits significantly more per mile because the fixed takeoff cost is spread across fewer miles.
This is why short-haul routes have higher per-mile intensity, and why replacing several short flights with a single longer trip does not save as much as the mileage difference suggests.
Round trips: the number most travelers underestimate
A one-way NYC → LA flight produces approximately 0.304 tCO₂e. A round trip is 0.608 tCO₂e. Two round trips per year — a realistic frequency for many business travelers — adds up to roughly 1.2 tCO₂e annually, or around 8% of the average American footprint.
Flights are high-impact discrete events rather than constant background emissions. Frequency is the largest single driver of flight-related emissions.
How one flight compares to other emission sources
One cross-country flight (approximately 0.6 tCO₂e) is roughly equivalent to:
- driving NYC → LA solo (2,790 miles one way, 25 MPG car) produces ~1.0 tCO₂e — roughly 3× a one-way economy flight
- 4–6 months of apartment electricity use
- 3–4 months of an omnivore diet
For context, the NYC → LA drive is approximately 2,790 miles one way. Solo in a standard 25 MPG car, that produces roughly 1.0 tCO₂e one way and 2.0 tCO₂e round trip — around 3.3× more than flying economy on the same route. With three or more passengers sharing the car, driving becomes the lower-carbon option per person.
Economy vs business class
Cabin class changes per-passenger emissions because premium seating reduces passenger density, increasing the share of fuel attributed to each seat.
| Cabin class | Relative emissions per passenger |
|---|---|
| Economy | 1× baseline |
| Premium economy | ~1.5× |
| Business | ~2–3× |
| First | ~3–4× |
This effect is structural, not behavioral. Choosing business class on a transatlantic flight can double or triple the attributed emissions of that journey.
What Decarb includes and excludes in flight calculations
For transparency, here is the exact boundary applied in Decarb v2.2:
Included: jet fuel combustion CO₂, per-passenger allocation based on seat density and load factor.
Excluded: radiative forcing index (non-CO₂ warming effects), aircraft manufacturing, airport infrastructure, airline corporate Scope 3 emissions.
Scientific literature suggests total warming impact may be 1.9–2.7× higher if non-CO₂ effects were included. Decarb applies a conservative operational-only boundary to maintain comparability across emission sources and avoid overstating impact. We document this assumption explicitly.
Structured reduction options
Reduction is primarily about frequency and cabin class, not complete elimination.
| Action | Approximate saving |
|---|---|
| Skip one cross-country round trip | ~0.6 tCO₂e |
| Replace three short flights with rail | ~0.6–0.9 tCO₂e |
| Switch business to economy class | 30–60% per flight |
| Combine two trips into one | ~0.3–0.7 tCO₂e |
A note on uncertainty
Flight emissions vary by aircraft type, load factor, routing, and weather conditions. A reasonable uncertainty range for any single flight estimate is ±10–25%. These are estimates, not meter readings — and Decarb presents them as such.
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