All Women from the Ground to the Skies: MH2610, Malaysia Airlines Historic Flight Completed

On 18 September 2025, Malaysia Airlines (MAS) made history on Flight MH2610 when it departed from Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL), Kuala Lumpur to Kota Kinabalu International Airport (BKI), Kota Kinabalu. The flight was entirely staffed entirely by women: the crew was all-female and so were the flight attendants, check-in staff, engineers, security officers, and ground operators. 

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This landmark event marked Malaysia Aviation Group (MAG)’s extraordinary efforts in not simply touching the International Air Transport Association’s (IATA) 25by2025 initiative, but bettering it. MAG reports that women now constitute 36% of its total workforce, exceeding the IATA target.

Photo: Malaysia Airlines | Facebook

Details of flight MH2610 from Kuala Lumpur to Kota Kinabalu

A Facebook post by Malaysian Airlines revealed that Flight MH2610 left KUL on the scheduled day with every operational role from “check-in agents, engineers, and security officers to cabin crew and pilots” was performed by women.

Here is a table summarizing MAG / MAS in terms of scale, base, and related metrics:

Attribute Details
Airline Malaysia Airlines (MAS) – part of Malaysia Aviation Group (MAG)
Based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Hub(s) Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL) is principal hub
Founded Malaysia Airlines traces its foundation to 1947; MAG is its parent group overseeing airline operations, engineering, ground handling, etc.
Workforce female share ~36 % of MAG’s total employees are women (as of September 2025)
Photo: Malaysia Airlines | Facebook

Malaysia Airlines, which has one of the largest airline capacity in South East Asia, revealed in a post how delighted they were of its achievement: 

“With women now making up 36 per cent of Malaysia Aviation Group’s workforce, surpassing the International Air Transport Association’s (IATA) 25by2025 initiative, this milestone marks not just progress, but a powerful reminder that the sky has no limits…..To all our colleagues and future aviators, may the flight inspire you to dream bigger and break barriers.”

Malaysia had done something similar, albeit in a smaller scale before

The following table compares previous operations by Malaysia Airlines / MAG and other airlines where full or majority female teams were used.

Instance Date & Route Scope of all/majority female involvement Purpose / Motivation
Flight MH2610, Kuala Lumpur → Kota Kinabalu 18 Sept 2025 Entire flight staff (ground, security, engineers, cabin crew, pilots) all women To showcase female representation; surpass IATA 25by2025 goals; promote women in aviation in Malaysia
MAS all-female flight for International Women’s Day, KL → Kuching March 2023 All operations managed by female staff; female pilots and air-crew among them To celebrate International Women’s Day; to highlight “Embrace Equity” campaign.
Photo: Malaysia Airlines | Facebook

How does MH2610 fit in IATA’s 25by2025 initiative

The 25by2025 program by the International Air Transport Association is a voluntary industry-wide initiative launched in 2019, urging signatory organisations like MAH group to achieve a minimum of 25% female participation in these roles by end-2025. 

Here are some snippets of the 25by2025 program:

  • Increase female nominations from airline for IATA governance roles to a minimum of 25% (IATA members only).
  • Increase the number of women in top senior positions to a minimum of 25%.
  • Increase the number of women participating at events, panels and conferences to a minimum of 25%.
  • Increase the number of women in senior positions and under-represented areas by 25%, or up to a minimum of 25% by 2025
Photo: Malaysia Airlines | Facebook

This table highlights the steady progress Malaysia Aviation Group (MAG) has made in increasing female representation across technical and leadership roles between 2021 and 2024.

 

Role 2021 2024
Management Pilots 0% 5%
Engineers 6% 8%
Technicians 5% 8%

Which aircraft was used for the all-female crew flight MH 2610? 

According to data from FlightAware, Malaysia Airlines uses a Boeing 737-800 on its operations between BKI and KUL. Malaysia Airlines has 40 aircraft of this type in its fleet and these have an average age of 12.8 years. Let’s have a look at how the airline configures its 737-800 – the type that is used in its historic flight. 

Photo: Malaysia Airlines | Facebook

Malaysia Airlines Boeing 737-800 cabin configurations

Cabin Feature Refreshed 2022 Configuration (12C 162M) Outgoing Configuration (16C 144M)
Business Class layout 12 Safran 600 recliner seats, 2-2 layout 16 recliner seats, 2-2 layout
Business Class pitch 39″ 42″
Business Class width 23″ 23″
Business Class features Fold-down tablet holder; USB-A, USB-C, + 1 Universal 115V AC socket 10.6″ display; 1 USB-A + 1 Universal 115V AC socket
Economy Class layout 162 Safran 110i slimline seats, 3-3 layout 144 slimline seats, 3-3 layout
Economy pitch 30″ (36″ at rows 14 & 15) 30″ (36″ at rows 12 & 14)
Economy width 17.5″ 17.5″ (rows 5, 12, 14 slightly narrower due to tray tables in armrests)
Economy features Fold-down tablet holder; USB-A and USB-C sockets Recline: 2″; 9″ display; Universal 115V AC socket
Other notes Shallow bulkhead screen; row 4 footwells extend beneath row 3 seats Connectivity not available

Source: Aerolopa

Photo: Malaysian Airlines | Facebook

All in all

Malaysia Airlines’ all-women flight adds to a gradual but accelerating trend in aviation to integrate gender diversity beyond tokenism. Much like how Malaysia Airlines managed a full-female crew flight in 2023, the Nepalese state carrier Nepal Airlines also followed in the footsteps, and managed a full-female crew flight in 2024. 

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