These Are The Fastest Passenger Planes Ever Built

These Are The Fastest Passenger Planes Ever Built

The quest for higher speeds might be back 20 years after the Concorde's retirement

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Start Slideshow
A British Airways Concorde takes off from Heathrow airport July 17, 2001 in London, United Kingdom.
Photo: Hugh Thomas/BWP Media

Most airlines today seem primarily concerned with how many fare-paying passengers can be stuffed onto every flight. However, there is a renewed appetite for supersonic aircraft across the industry. Airlines have been hedging their bets by placing orders with Boom Supersonic for new planes to operate first-class-only services. With that in mind, let’s look at the fastest planes ever to grace the skies for any airline:

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

2 / 12

Convair 880 - 600 mph

Convair 880 - 600 mph

From bottom to top: 1/ Convair 880 (ex-Consolidated) four-engine airliner. 2/ Convair B-58 Hustler bomber. 3/ Convair F-106 Delta Dart interceptor 1960.
Photo: Collection Bernard Crochet/Photo12/Universal Images Group (Getty Images)

Entering service in 1960, the Convair 880 was the most prominent speed-seeking symbol of the era. The jet airliner had a cruising speed of 600 miles per hour. The Convair’s name actually stems from its speed, 880 feet per second.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

3 / 12

Convair 990 - 644 mph

Convair 990 - 644 mph

A Swissair Convair 990 in 1968
Photo: Milou Steiner/RDB/ullstein bild (Getty Images)

The Convair 990 was the longer and even faster variant of the 880. The upgraded jet was made specifically for American Airlines. While the 990 was the fastest commercial airliner in the world, it didn’t meet the speed target promised to American Airlines.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

4 / 12

Boeing 747-400 - 656 mph

Boeing 747-400 - 656 mph

flying low on final-approach landing over Maho Beach with hotels behind B747 on the runway with hills behind.
Photo: aviation-images.com/Universal Images Group (Getty Images)

The Boeing 747 would first take to the skies for airlines in 1970. The jumbo jet signaled a gradual transition in commercial aviation away from extremely fast luxury services towards affordable, mass travel. An upgraded version of Boeing’s massive airliner, the 747-400, eventually surpassed the Convair in the late 1980s.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

5 / 12

Boeing 777 - 683 mph

Boeing 777 - 683 mph

LATAM Airlines Brasil Boeing 777 aircraft as seen on final approach flying over the houses of Myrtle avenue in London, a famous location for plane spotting, for landing at London Heathrow Airport LHR.
Photo: Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto (Getty Images)

The 747 couldn’t realistically service every route. The Boeing 777 was introduced in 1995 to serve as the widebody workhorse for airlines around the world. The modern airliner was the first Boeing to use electronic fly-by-wire controls and carbon composite materials.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

6 / 12

Airbus A380 - 683 mph

Airbus A380 - 683 mph

An Emirates Airbus A380 landing at London Heathrow Airport, Hounslow, United Kingdom Wednesday 14th December 2022.
Photo: Robert Smith/MI News/NurPhoto (Getty Images)

Airbus committed to a full double-decker concept with the A380 to rival the 747. The European superjumbo entered service in 2007 but could be completely absent from the skies by 2037. While the size and seating capacity caused its downfall, it never lacked speed compared to its competition.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

7 / 12

Boeing 787 Dreamliner - 690 mph

Boeing 787 Dreamliner - 690 mph

United Airlines Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft as seen during take off passing in front of the control tower and flying as it is departing from Amsterdam Schiphol Airport AMS EHAM in a blue sky day.
Photo: Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto (Getty Images)

The Boeing 787 has proven to be the airline’s vision of the future. It’s an airliner that basically sips fuel while having enough range to connect most airports. Fuel efficiency might be the Dreamliner’s main priority, but it can go fast when it needs to.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

8 / 12

Boeing 747-8I - 706 mph

Boeing 747-8I - 706 mph

A Boeing 747-8 departs from the Tegel airport in Berlin, Germany, 8 February 2018.
Photo: Britta Pedersen/picture alliance (Getty Images)

The most recent iteration of the Boeing 747 is only used by a handful of carriers, but the intercontinental long-hauler features a modern cabin interior and better fuel efficiency. The better efficiency came with the added benefit of a higher top speed. The 747 can now go faster than 700 miles per hour.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

9 / 12

Aérospatiale-BAC Concorde - 1,350 mph

Aérospatiale-BAC Concorde - 1,350 mph

Concorde "Fox Charlie" lands 27 June 2003 at the airport of Toulouse.
Photo: Pascal Pavani / AFP (Getty Images)

For many, the Concorde remains the pinnacle for passenger aircraft. The supersonic airliner entered service in 1976 with both Air France and British Airways after being jointly developed in France and the United Kingdom. During its time in the skies, it was rivaled by only one other aircraft.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

10 / 12

Tupolev Tu-144 - 1,510 mph

Tupolev Tu-144 - 1,510 mph

The Tupolev Tu-144LL supersonic flying laboratory shows off its sleek lines in a low-level pass over the Zhukovsky Air Development Center near Moscow, Russia, on a 1998 research flight.
Photo: NASA Dryden Flight Research Center

The Soviet Union developed its own supersonic airliner, the Tupolev Tu-114, which entered passenger service with Aeroflot in November 1977. The Tu-144 was retired from passenger flights only seven months later after a pre-delivery test crash for a new airframe. NASA used a Tu-144 as a testbed in the 1990s for the next generation of supersonic airliners.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide

11 / 12

Honorable Mention: Boom Overture - Possibly 1,100 mph

Honorable Mention: Boom Overture - Possibly 1,100 mph

Image for article titled These Are The Fastest Passenger Planes Ever Built
Image: Boom Supersonic

There hasn’t been a new supersonic airliner since Concorde’s retirement in 2003. The Boom Overture is the most realistic contender to revive passenger flights faster than the speed of sound. United Airlines and American Airlines have both placed orders for 35 Overtures with options for 75 more.

Advertisement