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Saudi Aramco returns to Dammam after a week of domestic flights

The oil giant's Boeing 737-8AL lands back at King Fahd International after a series of short hops across the Eastern Province.

By celebplanes · 1 min read · Saudi Aramco

Saudi Aramco corporate logo

Saudi Aramco

Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737-8AL (N801XA) flight path — OEDF — King Fahd to OEDF — King Fahd
Flight path · OEDF — King FahdOEDF — King Fahd · 3h 57m airborne
Departure
OEDF — King Fahd
Arrival
OEDF — King Fahd
Airborne
3h 57m
Distance
63 nm
CO₂
30.4t

Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737-8AL (N801XA) departed King Fahd International Airport at 4:18 AM UTC on June 4 and returned to the same airport at 8:15 AM UTC, completing a 3-hour-57-minute flight that remained within Saudi airspace. The aircraft reached a maximum altitude of 31,000 feet and a top ground speed of 487 knots.

The same week, Saudi Aramco's aviation division—operated by subsidiary Aloula Aviation—continued its routine pattern of shuttling employees and executives between company facilities in the Eastern Province. Recent flights show the aircraft moving between coordinates near Dammam, Abqaiq, and Ras Tanura, consistent with the company's known network of nine private airports and over 300 helipads serving remote oil fields and offshore platforms in the Persian Gulf, per the company's corporate aviation profile.

This particular trip appears to be a domestic repositioning flight rather than a response to a specific public event. Saudi Aramco's fleet of over 40 aircraft regularly supports internal logistics for the world's largest oil company by revenue and reserves, and this sortie fits that operational rhythm without any obvious external news trigger.

The aircraft

Type
Boeing 737-8AL
Tail
N801XA
Max alt
31,000 ft
Max speed
487 kt

End of article · celebplanes

Saudi Aramco returns to Dammam after a week of domestic flights · Celebplanes