How to interpret airline PNR printouts [duplicate]
I have a following air itinerary/PNR printout. How do I decode this? What does each line and column signify?
TK 693 V 14MAY 7 CAIIST HK1 3 0240 0550 32B E 0 M
SEE RTSVC2 TK 661 V 14MAY 7 ISTTUN HK1 I 0830 0925 333 E 0 M
SEE RTSVC3 TK 664 V 21MAY 7 TUNIST HK1 M 1700 2145 321 E 0 M
SEE RTSVC4 TK 692 V 22MAY 1 ISTCAI HK1 I 0035 0145 32B E 0 M
SEE RTSVC
Best Answer
In your PNR, there is 1 line for every leg of your trip, and in each line the details of this leg.
For 1st line:
TK 693 = airline company + flight number
V = Class
14MAY = date of departure
7 = day of week (here Sunday)
CAIIST = airport codes of your itinerary (CAI = Cairo to IST = Istanbul)
HK1 = hold confirmed - 1 person on booking
3 = departure terminal
0240 = time of departure (departure airport local time)
0550 = time of arrival (arrival airport local time)
32B = aircraft type (Airbus 321)
E = Electronic ticket type
0 = number of stops
M = meal code
Pictures about "How to interpret airline PNR printouts [duplicate]"
How do you interpret PNR?
The header line is automatically generated by the system after the first entry in a PNR. A newly created PNR includes the indicator RP followed by your office identification....Procedure.ElementDescriptionTC-BIZIndicates that PNR was created using a customer profile that contains Amadeus Travel Preferences.11 more rowsCan two airlines have same PNR?
It depends. If both airlines are on the same ticket (same alliance or not), there is a good chance your bags will be checked right through to your final destination. If they are on separate tickets, you (probably) will have to collect and recheck your bags between flights.Is PNR unique in flight?
Booking reference assignment. The system generates a booking reference \u2014 a unique alphabetic or alphanumeric code assigned to the PNR file. It serves as a digital address of the document in the airline's database.Is PNR and airline reference same?
A booking reference, also referred to as a PNR or Record Locator, is the airline's internal identifier for your flight booking within their computer system.Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Jeffry Surianto, Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio