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Notable Aircraft at CXO Right Now

Widebodies, super-heavies, military traffic, and emergency squawks in the CXO pattern right now. If there's anything worth noticing, it surfaces here first.

CXO Departures & Arrivals

Scheduled flights for today at Conroe-North Houston Regional Airport with gate, terminal, and current status. Separate from the live radar above, which shows every aircraft in the sky whether or not it's on a public schedule.

Status Airline Flight Destination Sched Updated Gate
No flights match your search.
No flight data available.

Top Airlines at CXO Right Now

0 aircraft tracked

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Aircraft Types in the Pattern

The aircraft type mix at CXO updates as flights enter and leave the radar. Heavy widebodies point to long-haul service; regional jets and narrowbodies dominate at domestic-focused airports.

About Conroe-North Houston Regional Airport

CXO's busiest nonstop destination is DAL, at 1 flights a week. 35 scheduled destinations overall, served by 15 airlines. Based in Houston.

Elevation
245ft
Routes
35
Airlines
15
Busiest Route
CXO → DAL
1x/week
View all CXO routes

All Tracked Flights

Every aircraft currently inside the CXO radar. Sort by any column. Click a row to open its tracker page with route arc, altitude profile, and live telemetry.

Callsign Route Type Dir Alt Speed Dist Squawk

Frequently Asked Questions

Aircraft positions refresh every 5 seconds. ADS-B is GPS-accurate, so what you see is within about 30 meters of the aircraft's real position.

Altitude. Red on the ground, through green, teal, and blue for mid-altitudes, into violet above 40,000 feet. At a glance you can tell who just took off, who is climbing through the pattern, and who is cruising overhead.

They are inside the CXO radar radius but not landing or departing here. Passing through en route to another airport. We flag them so the numbers for CXO traffic actually reflect CXO traffic.

Click any aircraft on the map. You get its track line across the region and an altitude profile showing the climb, cruise, and descent.

A pulsing red circle indicates an emergency squawk: 7500 (hijack), 7600 (comm failure), or 7700 (general emergency). These are legally-required codes pilots set when something is wrong.

The radar shows live aircraft positions. Gate, terminal, and schedule status sit in the Board section above this one.

GPS-accurate via ADS-B, typically within 30 meters horizontally. Aircraft refresh every 5 to 10 seconds. When a signal drops (mountain terrain, certain oceanic corridors), the marker holds the last-known position instead of disappearing.