✈️ Plane Finder — User-Friendly Flight Tracker
What it is: Plane Finder is a flight tracking tool that’s easy for beginners to use but still offers detailed information on flights in real-time. It shows aircraft positions, flight numbers, departure and arrival airports, and more, either in your browser or via its free app.
🔗 https://planefinder.net/
✈️ Airplanes.Live — Data-Rich Flight Map
What it is: Airplanes.Live provides a more data-intensive view of aircraft movements. It includes many details that aren’t available on Flightradar24, such as military and government flights. The interface is more utilitarian, but the depth of data is its key strength.
🔗 https://globe.airplanes.live/
✈️ Airloom — Aesthetic Real-Time Flight Visualizer
What it is: Airloom emphasizes design and visual experience over raw data. It uses flight data (sourced from Airplanes.Live) to show beautiful animations of flights in real-time — ideal for screens or as an engaging way to watch air traffic. It’s not as informative as other trackers, but stands out for its artistic presentation.
🔗 https://objectiveunclear.com/
📻 LiveATC — Air Traffic Radio (Bonus mention)
What it is: LiveATC isn’t a flight tracker in the map sense — instead, it lets you listen to live air traffic control communications from airports and heliports around the world. It’s great if you want the sound of flight operations and pilot-controller chatter.
🔗 https://www.liveatc.net/
🛫 FlightAware — Comprehensive Real-Time & Historical Flight Tracking
What it is: FlightAware is one of the most widely used global flight tracking platforms. It offers real-time flight positions, detailed flight status data (such as departures, arrivals, delays), and predictive features. It aggregates data from its own extensive network of ADS-B receivers and multiple aviation sources to provide broad global coverage. FlightAware also supports historical flight data and is used by both aviation professionals and enthusiasts.
🔗 https://flightaware.com/
🛰 RadarBox — Feature-Rich Flight Tracking & Aviation Intelligence
What it is: RadarBox (recently rebranded from RadarBox24) is a real-time aircraft tracking service that displays flights on an interactive map with details like aircraft type, flight number, altitude, speed, origins/destinations, and airport information. It pulls data from a blend of terrestrial and satellite ADS-B networks and offers additional tools like historical flight playback, notifications, and aviation analytics — useful for spotters, journalists, and professionals.
🔗 https://www.radarbox.com/
🧠 OpenSky Network — Open Data Flight Tracking for Research
What it is: The OpenSky Network is a non-profit, research-oriented flight tracking platform that collects and shares raw ADS-B and other surveillance data. Unlike commercial trackers, its focus is on open access to high-quality aviation data for academic and scientific use, though it also provides a live flight map and APIs for developers and hobbyists.
🔗 https://opensky-network.org/
🛰 ADS‑B Exchange — Unfiltered, Community‑Feeder Flight Tracking
What it is: ADS‑B Exchange (often abbreviated ADSBx) is a flight tracking platform built from a global crowd of volunteer ADS‑B, Mode S, and MLAT feeders, meaning its map shows aircraft based on real, unfiltered data collected by participants around the world. Unlike many commercial trackers, ADS‑B Exchange does not block or censor aircraft data, including military and private flights if a feeder receives them — making it popular among aviation enthusiasts and researchers.
🔗 https://www.adsbexchange.com/
🌍 adsb.fi — Community‑Driven Open Flight Tracker
What it is: adsb.fi is a community‑built global flight tracking site with thousands of feeders contributing real‑time ADS‑B data. Its focus is on open, unfiltered air traffic data, presented on an interactive map and updated live. As with other community projects, users can host their own ADS‑B receivers to help improve coverage.
🔗 https://adsb.fi/
😂 ADSB.lol — Unfiltered Flight Tracking with Open Data Focus
What it is: ADSB.lol is a flight tracker that emphasizes free, unfiltered data and accessibility, providing an open‑data API and public historical archives under open permissive terms. It is run by enthusiasts and is often used by hobbyists or developers who want access to raw flight data without the restrictions seen on some commercial sites.
🔗 https://adsb.lol/
📡 TheAirTraffic — Global Flight Data Aggregator
What it is: TheAirTraffic is a newer global flight tracking site created by aviation data community Ground Control. It aims to provide unrestricted access to both real‑time and historical flight data, combining features from more traditional trackers with an open approach to aircraft tracking.
🔗 https://theairtraffic.com/
🛩 PlaneSpotters.net (Tracker) — Community ADS‑B Flight Tracker & Aviation Resource
What it is: PlaneSpotters.net is primarily known as a civil aviation database with extensive aircraft photos, fleet info, and spotting resources, but it also hosts its own flight tracker based on community ADS‑B feeds. While still growing, it represents another enthusiast‑driven alternative in the ecosystem.
🔗 https://www.planespotters.net/
🛠 ADSB Hub — DIY Open Source ADS‑B Receiver & Sharing Platform
What it is: ADSB Hub isn’t a traditional viewer like the others above; it’s an open‑source software package that lets you set up your own ADS‑B receiver and aggregate local data feeds. Users can display aircraft positions and tracks on their own map, and share that data publicly if they choose — effectively enabling them to build their own community flight tracker.
🔗 https://github.com/ (search for “ADSB Hub” on GitHub)
Bonus
adsb.one – A community aggregator for ADS‑B data.
Plane.watch – A community‑hosted flight tracker showing real‑time traffic.
live‑military‑mode‑s.eu – Focuses on military aircraft tracking.
adsb.chaos‑consulting.de – A non‑commercial tracker run by aviation enthusiasts.
Comparison
| Tool | Real‑Time Tracking | Open/Unfiltered Data | Historical Data / Playback | Military / Private Visible | API / Developer Access |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flightradar24 | ✔️ Yes — global real‑time aircraft positions on a map (ADS‑B + other sources) (Wikipedia) | ❌ Commercial; some data filtered | ✔️ Replay & historical data (tier varies by subscription) (Wikipedia) | ⚠️ Limited — some military/private flights suppressed by design (Reddit) | ✔️ Yes (commercial API & data products) |
| FlightAware | ✔️ Yes — broad real‑time tracking via own ADS‑B + other sources (FlightAware) | ❌ Commercial service | ✔️ Yes — flight history & status | ⚠️ Limited — private/military often filtered | ✔️ Yes (commercial & enterprise APIs) |
| RadarBox | ✔️ Yes — live tracking with flight details (Flightradars24.de) | ❌ Commercial (but integrates large ADS‑B network) (AirNav Radar) | ✔️ Yes (historical with subscription) | ⚠️ Limited (similar to commercial platforms) | ✔️ Yes |
| ADS‑B Exchange | ✔️ Yes — live global ADS‑B data via community feeders (ADS-B Exchange) | ✔️ Yes — raw, unfiltered data (no censorship) (ADS-B Exchange) | Limited intrinsic playback without external tools | ✔️ Often includes military/private when transponded (Reddit) | ✔️ Yes — API & raw feeds |
| OpenSky Network | ✔️ Yes — real‑time and recorded ADS‑B/Mode S data (opensky-network.org) | ✔️ Yes — open access research data (Wikipedia) | ✔️ Yes — historical datasets and archive downloads (opensky-network.org) | ⚠️ Depends on receiver data coverage (not filtered but limited by feeds) (opensky-network.org) | ✔️ Yes — open API access (opensky-network.org) |
| adsb.fi | ✔️ Yes — live crowd‑sourced ADS‑B feed display (adsb.fi) | ✔️ Yes — unfiltered ADS‑B data (adsb.fi) | ❌ Limited built‑in history (focus is on live) | ✔️ Private/military visible if transponded (adsb.fi) | ❌ No public API (visual only) |
| ADSB.lol | ✔️ Yes — live, unfiltered aggregate data (adsb.lol) | ✔️ Yes — open data emphasis (free API & archive) (adsb.lol) | ✔️ Daily archive available (adsb.lol) | ✔️ Yes — no filtering (adsb.lol) | ✔️ Yes — free API (adsb.lol) |