TOKYO – Passengers aboard All Nippon Airways (ANA) flight NH223 experienced a grueling “flight to nowhere” on Tuesday, after a mechanical issue forced their Boeing 787-9 to turn back more than six hours into its journey to Frankfurt.
The aircraft, registered as JA875A, departed Tokyo Haneda at 10:55 AM local time. It was well into its trans-polar route, positioned north of Alaska, when the crew identified a maintenance concern. Rather than diverting to a nearby airport in North America or continuing across the Atlantic, ANA management opted to return the aircraft to its primary maintenance hub in Tokyo.
The 10-year-old aircraft turned around while cruising at 35,000 feet over Arctic Ocean, approximately 1,100 nautical miles (2,000 kilometers) from The North Pole.
The Long Way Home
By the time the Dreamliner touches back down at Haneda, the passengers will have spent approximately 14 hours in the air, only to end up exactly where they started.
| Flight Detail | Information |
| Flight Number | NH223 |
| Aircraft Type | Boeing 787-9 (JA875A) |
| Original Departure | Feb 17, 10:55 AM |
| Point of U-Turn | North of Alaska |
| Total Airborne Time | Approx. 13 Hours |
Airline Response and Recovery
An ANA spokesperson confirmed that the decision to return to Tokyo was made to ensure the mechanical issue could be handled by the airline’s own specialized engineers and to streamline the logistics of getting a replacement aircraft into service.
The airline has worked to re-accommodate the frustrated travelers. A new departure has been scheduled for:
- New Departure: February 18, 2026, at 07:10 AM
- Total Delay: Approximately 20 hours and 30 minutes
While a 13-hour U-turn is rare, airlines often prefer “home base” repairs for complex technical issues to avoid the high costs and logistical hurdles of repairing an aircraft at a foreign outstation.
UPDATE #1
Flight ANA NH233 is returning due to suspected low oil level in one engine according to source.
UPDATE #2
Landed on runway 34L, 14 hours after departure!
