This guide is from the team behind FlightCatcherPro. We built the app to turn plane spotting into a game—here’s how we’d get started.
Plane spotting is watching, IDing, and often photographing aircraft. From home with a tracker, at an airport viewing area, or at airshows and museums. Here: what to bring, the best apps for beginners, and where to spot.
In short
- You need a smartphone, optional binoculars, and a tracker plus a spotting game.
- Start with FlightRadar24 or FlightAware, then add an ID/collection app like FlightCatcherPro.
- Best starter airports: Heathrow, LAX, Schiphol, Dubai—we have a full list with tips.
- Match what you see to a flight on the tracker; with practice you’ll recognise types and liveries.
What is plane spotting?
Plane spotting is observing and IDing aircraft by type, airline, or reg. Lots of spotters keep a log or collection. Apps let you track flights in real time, ID planes with your phone, and turn spotting into a game by catching aircraft and adding them to a digital hangar or deck.
What you need to get started
- Smartphone: flight tracking apps, camera, and a plane spotting game (e.g. FlightCatcherPro).
- Binoculars (optional): helpful at busy airports to read regs and see details.
- An app or two: a tracker (e.g. FlightRadar24) to see what's overhead, and optionally a plane spotting game to collect and ID aircraft.
Best apps for plane spotting beginners
Start with a flight tracker to see what's nearby (FlightRadar24, FlightAware, or Plane Finder). Then add something to ID and collect: FlightCatcherPro turns spotting into a game: lock on, ID, and add aircraft to your hangar. Full list of trackers, loggers, and games: our top 10 plane spotting apps.
Try FlightCatcherPro (iOS) or join the Android waitlist →
Best airports for plane spotting beginners
Busy internationals with public viewing areas or known spotting spots work best. At a viewing area you get the rumble and the rotation—a tracker lets you match that to a flight. London Heathrow (Myrtle Avenue), LAX (Imperial Hill, In-N-Out), Dubai, Amsterdam Schiphol. We've listed the top 10 best airports for plane spotting with tips; many have dedicated spotting guides.
How to identify planes
Use a flight tracker to match what you see to a flight (airline, type, reg). Apps like FlightCatcherPro and PlaneSpot use your camera or real-time data to ID aircraft and add them to your collection. With practice you'll recognise common types (737, A320) and liveries.
FAQ: plane spotting for beginners
Is plane spotting legal?
In most countries, watching and photographing from public land or designated viewing areas is legal. Respect local rules, private property, and airport security.
What is the best plane spotting app for beginners?
A flight tracker (FlightRadar24 or FlightAware) plus a game-style app like FlightCatcherPro: real-time visibility and a fun way to collect and ID aircraft. See our top 10 plane spotting apps for the full list.
Can I plane spot from home?
Yes. Flight tracking apps show live traffic; you can "spot" and identify planes overhead and, with FlightCatcherPro, catch them and add them to your hangar from home.
Lock on, ID, and collect with FlightCatcherPro. More guides in our plane spotting guides.