Etihad ranked world’s safest airline for 2026
John E. Kaye

Airline Ratings’ latest safety tables place the Abu Dhabi carrier at the top of the full-service category, with Cathay Pacific, Qantas, Qatar and Emirates close behind and HK Express leading low-cost airlines
Etihad has been ranked the world’s safest full-service airline for 2026.
The UAE’s national carrier took the top position ahead of Cathay Pacific, Qantas, Qatar and Emirates in AirlineRatings.com’s annual assessment, which evaluates 320 airlines worldwide using incident rates adjusted for flights, fleet age, serious incidents, pilot training, international safety audits and operational transparency, with additional weight this year given to turbulence prevention.
Cathay Pacific, Qantas, Qatar and Emirates complete the top five in a year where Airline Ratings says the scoring gap between leading carriers has become exceptionally tight.
The full-service list also includes airlines such as Air New Zealand, Singapore Airlines, EVA Air, Korean Air, Turkish Airlines, Virgin Atlantic, ANA, TAP Air Portugal, British Airways, Lufthansa, Air Canada, Delta and American Airlines.
STARLUX and Fiji Airways appear in the rankings for the first time, while Singapore Airlines returns after its exclusion in 2025 following a turbulence-related incident.
HK Express, meanwhile, has been ranked the world’s safest low-cost airline for 2026. The Hong Kong-based carrier, owned by Cathay Pacific, operates services across Asia and leads a separate table assessed using the same methodology but applied to larger, high-frequency airlines operating low-cost models.

The low-cost rankings also mark the first appearance of Spring Airlines China and a significant rise for airBaltic into the top 10, alongside the continued inclusion of airlines such as Jetstar, Scoot, easyJet Group, Southwest, Wizz Air Group, Ryanair Ireland and UK, Jet2, Norwegian, Vueling and WestJet Group.
Airline Ratings said that although every airline featured has recorded incidents over the past two years, the rate per flight across those ranked sits between 0.002 and 0.09.
Speaking about this year’s results, its CEO Sharon Petersen said: “What stands out this year is how little separates the leaders. Less than four points covered positions one through 14, and at the very top the margins were even tighter, with just 1.3 points separating positions one through six in the full service category.
“We may be reaching a point where traditional rankings risk being misleading, and where grouping airlines into performance tiers provides a more accurate reflection of reality. All airlines in the Top 25 are world leaders in aviation safety, and claims that one is significantly safer or less safe than another are both sensationalist and false.”
Top 25 Full-Service Airlines for 2026
Etihad
Cathay Pacific
Qantas
Qatar
Emirates
Air New Zealand
Singapore Airlines
EVA Air
Virgin Australia
Korean Air
STARLUX
Turkish Airlines
Virgin Atlantic
ANA
Alaska Airlines
TAP Air Portugal
SAS
British Airways
Vietnam Airlines
Iberia
Lufthansa
Air Canada
Delta
American Airlines
Fiji Airways
Top 25 Safest Low-Cost Airlines for 2026
HK Express
Jetstar Airways
Scoot
flydubai
EasyJet Group
Southwest
airBaltic
VietJet Air
Wizz Air Group
AirAsia Group
TUI UK
Vueling
Norwegian
JetBlue
FlyNAS
Cebu Pacific
Jet2
Ryanair Ireland and UK
Spring Airlines China
Transavia Group
Eurowings Group
Volaris
WestJet Group
GOL
SKY Airline Chile
READ MORE: ‘African airspace overhaul set to shorten flight times for European travellers’. A new free-route airspace regime across West and Central Africa is set to reshape cross-continental travel, with airlines able to adopt direct, fuel-efficient paths that strengthen links between Europe and key African destinations.
Do you have news to share or expertise to contribute? The European welcomes insights from business leaders and sector specialists. Get in touch with our editorial team to find out more.
Main image: Credit, AirlineRatings.com
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Solar and storage: Europe’s response to energy crises -
Xpeng eyes European factory as VW seeks to offload spare capacity -
This hidden Greek beach has just been named the best in Europe -
Siemens expands rail technology arm with Italian deal -
New routes put Europe’s rail revival back on track -
Parked electric cars could help power island ferries in German trial -
UK billionaire count falls as wealthy quit Britain, Sunday Times Rich List shows -
Macron unveils £20bn Africa push as France strikes new Kenya deals -
Italy draws global tech investors as Europe races to build its own champions -
Opel turns to Chinese EV technology for new European-built SUV -
Japan and Luxembourg deepen space ties as lunar race gathers pace -
Meet the Earth Prize-winning teenager tackling the world’s microplastic crisis -
Starmer fights for future as he moves to nationalise British Steel -
Bluebird returns to Coniston 59 years after Campbell’s fatal crash -
Pentagon reopens Moon mystery in huge UFO files release -
De Niro's Nobu heads to the country with first rural hotel in Rutland -
Tourist wins €900 after ‘sunbed wars’ ruined Greek holiday -
Europe Day warning to China as EU says ties must be ‘rebalanced’ -
Germany opens door to Indian startups with Berlin launch -
‘Lost’ zip design could give space exploration a lift -
Three property trade bodies merge to create stronger lobbying voice for landlords and investors -
Keir, on your bike! Boris Johnson uses father Stanley’s book launch to take swipe at Starmer -
Exclusive: Boris joins father Stanley and brothers Max, Leo and Jo for BSA launch of new Marco Polo book -
Firms ‘wasting AI’ by using it to speed up bad habits -
AstraZeneca revives £300m UK investment after pausing major projects


























