Is the São Paulo to Bogotá flight turbulent? Live forecast & historical patterns.
Historical average pattern for GRU–BOG
The São Paulo to Bogotá route crosses the North Atlantic, where the jet stream is the primary source of turbulence. Flying at 38,000 feet, the aircraft encounters the strongest bumps roughly 2–5 hours into the flight. This is clear-air turbulence — no clouds, no visual warning — which makes a pre-flight forecast especially valuable.
The route is served by LATAM, Avianca on Airbus A330 · Boeing 767 aircraft, with flights typically cruising at 38,000 feet over a distance of 3,016 miles (2,620 nautical miles).
💡 Tip: Turbulence peaks mid-flight over the Atlantic. First and last hour are usually smooth.
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Airbus A330-300
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Other popular routes with turbulence data
Scores represent typical conditions. Actual turbulence varies daily. For real-time forecasts, use the Turbulence Forecast app. · About our data