Economy & Markets
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World's Safest Airlines for 2026: Etihad Airways Takes Top Spot
The Indian Express
January 21, 2026•1 day ago

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Etihad Airways has been named the world's safest full-service airline for 2026, becoming the first Gulf carrier to achieve this. Cathay Pacific and Qantas follow, with Qatar Airways and Emirates also in the top five. Asian carriers secured four spots in the top ten. Rankings reflect minor differences between leaders, with Air New Zealand and ANA dropping in position.
Etihad Airways was named the world’s safest full-service airline for 2026, becoming the first Gulf carrier to top the list.
Cathay Pacific secured the second spot, followed by Qantas — last year’s winner — Qatar Airways, and Emirates.
The 2026 rankings also reflect notable shifts, with Air New Zealand, which led as the world’s safest airline in 2025, fell down five spots to rank at sixth in 2026.
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Furthermore, Singapore Airlines returned to the top 10 at seventh place after being excluded last year following a major turbulence-related incident.
Another significant change involved ANA (All Nippon Airways), which dropped from eighth place to fourteenth in the rankings this year, falling out of the top 10 for 2026.
“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,” CEO Sharon Petersen was quoted as saying on the website.
Top 10 safest airlines in the world in 2026:
Methodology:
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Petersen said while ranking the airlines, much of their “criteria remains consistent year on year and considers incident rates adjusted for the total number of flights, fleet age, serious incidents, pilot training and international safety audits”.
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