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Thai Airways Appoints First Female Pilot in 66 Years History

Thai Airways International Public Company Limited marked a historic milestone on 2 June 2026 when a female pilot operated a commercial flight for the national carrier for the first time in its 66-year history.

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Pannathorn Tangrungruangchai, known as “Bam”, served as the airline’s first female First Officer on flight TG564 from Bangkok to Hanoi. The flight was operated on an Airbus A320-200, registration HS-TXS. Thai Airways said this was the first time a woman had served as a pilot for the airline since it began operations 66 years ago.

The occasion was attended by Chuntarica Jotikasthira, Chief Human Resources Officer, along with executives from the airline’s flight operations team. The appointment represents a significant milestone for the national carrier and highlights its stated commitment to diversity and equal opportunity in aviation.

Although this is a first for Thai Airways, female pilots have been serving as captains and first officers at other Thai and international airlines for many years. Women nevertheless remain underrepresented in commercial aviation worldwide.

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According to industry data from Women in Aviation International, women accounted for approximately 5.5% of airline transport pilots in the United States in 2024. International estimates place the global share of female airline pilots at around 6%, illustrating the continuing gender imbalance within the profession.

Thai Airways said the appointment reflects its commitment to diversity and equal opportunity in aviation. The airline did not provide details on whether women had previously applied for pilot positions or explain why no female pilot had joined its flight crew ranks before 2026.

Pannathorn graduated from the Aeronautical Engineering and Commercial Pilot Programme at King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Ladkrabang. She later completed flight training at Asia Aviation Academy before gaining more than four years of experience as an Airbus A320 First Officer with another airline.

The airline said it hopes the appointment will encourage more women to pursue careers in commercial aviation. The move may also draw attention to wider efforts across the aviation industry to increase female representation in cockpit roles.

Khaosod reported that as Thai Airways continues its operations, the airline is expected to build on its diversity initiatives while promoting career opportunities for future generations of pilots.

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Pictures courtesy of Khaosod

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image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now Khaosod 3 June 2026

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superal Platinum Member

superal

Advanced Member
On 6/3/2026 at 3:08 AM, emptypockets said:

As long as there are no hill starts or three point turns it should be ok.

and the wrong time of the month ?

zombie nights Senior Member

zombie nights

Member

Why don’t women pilots ever get lost? Because they actually read the flight manual.

Yellowtail Star Member

Yellowtail

Advanced Member

Let's hope she doesn't back into anything.

novacova Diamond Member

novacova

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

Let's hope she doesn't back into anything.

Even if she didn’t hit anything, the aircraft would have to be grounded for inspection for using reverse thrusters on the tarmac while attempting to taxi from the gate.

ozfarang Silver Member

ozfarang

Advanced Member
16 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

Let's hope she doesn't back into anything.

Reverse thrust near the terminal and on general taxiways, its use is heavily restricted or prohibited by most airlines.

So not likely to reverse into anything,

Or was that comment in jest?

Yellowtail Star Member

Yellowtail

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, ozfarang said:

Reverse thrust near the terminal and on general taxiways, its use is heavily restricted or prohibited by most airlines.

So not likely to reverse into anything,

Or was that comment in jest?

It was in jest

dinsdale Star Member

dinsdale

Advanced Member
12 hours ago, still kicking said:

Nonsense, my Thai wife has had a licence for about 20 years, get lost.

My wife payed Bt2000 for hers after failing the test a couple of times (the written part). Mind you one of the blokes there told her that the amber light isn't amber (or orange as my wife said, sii som) it's yellow. As for the article good on her but as for "gender imbalance" that's just the way it is. More men want to be pilots than women. The reverse is true when it comes to teaching or nursing for example.

J Branche Gold Member

J Branche

Advanced Member
12 hours ago, Maybole said:

I worked in aviation for 40 years, until recently many women were detered by the unsocial hours and were reluctant to work nights or even late evenings alongside male colleagues.

The two I know really, really love flying. I asked about the having a baby and being away from home but they said they would work through that problem when they got to it.

Some female pilots just want to fly Local/US. It's still not an easy decision. Having a relationship, possibly family, the multiple scheduling difficulties with outside of work commitments, not something easily solved.

Most FA's flying international have support systems in place at home or older kids. For Delta it was 24 hours off upon arrival at foreign destination Long Haul Flights.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member

The photo shows her with 3 stripes on her shoulder. Pilots have 4. Why the difference?

Rams86 Gold Member

Rams86

Advanced Member

I suppose her father is a high up official in Thai Airways or a senior officer in the Thai Air Force

I have them next door to where I live. A Thai Airways pilot, a male flight attendent and a person who is high up in Thai Airways. Of course daddy was a senior officer in the Thai Airforce. The nepotism is totally out of control in Thailand.

Georgealbert Star Member

Georgealbert

News Team
16 minutes ago, Photoguy21 said:

The photo shows her with 3 stripes on her shoulder. Pilots have 4. Why the difference?

If you read the article you would see that she is a first officer.

Not all pilot have 4 stripes only captains.

IMG_3813.jpeg

Sigmund Gold Member

Sigmund

Advanced Member

I would love to go under the cockpit seat..😜

Nick Carter icp Star Member

Nick Carter icp

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, Sigmund said:

I would love to go under the cockpit seat..😜

Why would you want to do that ?

orchidfan Gold Member

orchidfan

Advanced Member
21 hours ago, dinsdale said:

My wife payed Bt2000 for hers after failing the test a couple of times (the written part). Mind you one of the blokes there told her that the amber light isn't amber (or orange as my wife said, sii som) it's yellow. As for the article good on her but as for "gender imbalance" that's just the way it is. More men want to be pilots than women. The reverse is true when it comes to teaching or nursing for example.

My wife had her son do the written and after backing into the cat behind, than bumping the on in front trying to get out of a street side parking spot, the cop had had enough and it only cost her ฿1000 to "pass".....

This was some years ago.

Drives (by local standards) very safely now.🤗

Yellowtail Star Member

Yellowtail

Advanced Member

My wife and kid passed on the first try without problem or tip.

I had at least 15 women (office and floor) get their licenses with a company pickup when I was working, and almost all passed the test the first time.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
22 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

If you read the article you would see that she is a first officer.

Not all pilot have 4 stripes only captains.

IMG_3813.jpeg

So she isn't the captain i..e. the one with overall control.

Georgealbert Star Member

Georgealbert

News Team
6 minutes ago, Photoguy21 said:

So she isn't the captain i..e. the one with overall control.

It is in the article.

“Pannathorn Tangrungruangchai, known as “Bam”, served as the airline’s first female First Officer on flight TG564 from Bangkok to Hanoi”

Which is normal as in almost all commercial airline career paths worldwide, airline captains begin as first officers (co-pilots).

orchidfan Gold Member

orchidfan

Advanced Member
On 6/4/2026 at 3:37 PM, Georgealbert said:

If you read the article you would see that she is a first officer.

Not all pilot have 4 stripes only captains.

IMG_3813.jpeg

If we're talking about the TG female pilot, the photo in the cockpit shows her with TWO,2 stripes making her a Second Officer or junior First..but not a full First officer with 3 stripes???

Georgealbert Star Member

Georgealbert

News Team
12 minutes ago, orchidfan said:

If we're talking about the TG female pilot, the photo in the cockpit shows her with TWO,2 stripes making her a Second Officer or junior First..but not a full First officer with 3 stripes???

A where did I say she had 3 stripes.

The OP quoted ThaiAirways which says she was first officer on the flight.

orchidfan Gold Member

orchidfan

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Georgealbert said:

A where did I say she had 3 stripes.

The OP quoted ThaiAirways which says she was first officer on the flight.

Yes, quite.

I guess TG made her an acting FO, perhaps under " Line Training ", or the OP was just making it simple for the average person who has generally no idea about flight crews. Cockpit management, flight planning or eveb how a modern "airliner" even gets from A to B.

Worldwide, the female pilots are, from my 40+ years experience, highly professional, skilled, calm, level headed and can in no way be compared to scatter brained, uneducated housewives alluded to by some of our members here.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member
On 6/3/2026 at 10:07 PM, josephbloggs said:


No she can't. No woman can. That's why you don't see women driving cars in the west.

Explains why she does not have 4 stripes!

Hanuman2547 Gold Member

Hanuman2547

Advanced Member

Well done Thai Airways and welcome to the 21t century. It's about time.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
On 6/5/2026 at 1:40 PM, Georgealbert said:

It is in the article.

“Pannathorn Tangrungruangchai, known as “Bam”, served as the airline’s first female First Officer on flight TG564 from Bangkok to Hanoi”

Which is normal as in almost all commercial airline career paths worldwide, airline captains begin as first officers (co-pilots).

I hope she will be better than most of the female pilots when she gets her forth stripe.

orchidfan Gold Member

orchidfan

Advanced Member
45 minutes ago, Photoguy21 said:

I hope she will be better than most of the female pilots when she gets her forth stripe.

Trolling nonsense

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