Track Network Aviation Group cargo
Enter the 8-digit serial after prefix 041 to reach Network Aviation Group's official tracking.
Network Aviation Group is currently flagged as inactive in our directory. The page is preserved for reference.
About Network Aviation Group cargo tracking
Network Aviation Group is the cargo operation behind a major commercial air carrier headquartered in AE. Like most large airlines, it issues Master Air Waybills under its IATA prefix 041, which is what TrackJet matches when you paste an 11-digit number into the search box on this page.
Most Network Aviation Group air-cargo bookings are tracked through the carrier's own tracking system, which TrackJet links to directly using your MAWB. Status data typically appears 4 to 6 hours after departure as the shipment moves through the airline's handling network. Earlier than that you may see only the booking confirmation.
If your MAWB does not appear in Network Aviation Group's tracking system at all, it is usually because the airline assigns the AWB stock to a forwarder before flight, and the forwarder has not yet notified the carrier. In that case the right next step is to contact your forwarder rather than the airline directly.
Frequently asked questions about Network Aviation Group
- Network Aviation Group issues Master Air Waybills under prefix 041. Any 11-digit MAWB starting with 041- belongs to this carrier (or a partner carrier flying on its AWB stock).
- The MAWB is printed on the air waybill document your forwarder sends you, usually at the top right. It's an 11-digit number formatted as 041-XXXXXXXX. If you only have a tracking confirmation email, the number will be in the body or attachment.
- Most carriers, Network Aviation Group included, refresh tracking 4 to 6 hours after the flight departs. Some milestones (e.g. acceptance, customs clearance) update sooner. If nothing has appeared after 24 hours, contact your forwarder before assuming a problem.
- This usually means Network Aviation Group hasn't received the booking from the forwarder yet, or the AWB was issued under a different airline's prefix as part of a code-share / interline arrangement. Re-check the prefix on the AWB document and contact your forwarder.
- No. The MAWB is the unique identifier the airline uses internally. Without it, Network Aviation Group's tracking system has nothing to look up. If you've lost the number, your forwarder can re-issue it from their booking record.