đź“…This fact may be outdated

The number '14 blimps' appears to be outdated or incorrect. The widely cited figure from 2021 is approximately 25 blimps worldwide, with only about half actively in use. However, airship experts note this number is impossible to verify precisely as it depends on whether you count only operational blimps or include those in storage. The figure has likely changed since 2021, and the specific number '14' doesn't match any reliable current sources.

There are only 14 blimps in the world.

How Many Blimps Still Float the Skies?

3k viewsPosted 16 years agoUpdated 5 hours ago

If you've ever spotted a blimp floating lazily across the sky at a sporting event, you've witnessed something surprisingly rare. As of the early 2020s, experts estimated there were only about 25 blimps in the entire world, and only half of them were actively flying. That's fewer blimps than Subway sandwich shops in a single city block.

But here's where it gets tricky: nobody actually knows the exact number. Dan Grossman, an airship expert, calls the question "inscrutable" because it depends on how you count. Are we talking about blimps currently inflated and cruising? Or do we include deflated ones sitting in storage that could theoretically fly again?

Why So Few?

Blimps once ruled the skies for advertising, passenger travel, and military reconnaissance. So what happened? Three words: slow, expensive, impractical.

  • They're incredibly slow compared to planes
  • They can only carry small loads
  • Operating costs are astronomical
  • Modern drones and helicopters do the job better
  • Weather conditions can ground them for days

The Airsign Airship Group operates 8 of the active blimps you might see today, including the Hood Blimp, DirecTV blimp, and MetLife blimp. Meanwhile, Goodyear—probably the name you think of when you hear "blimp"—operates just 3 in the United States, plus 1 in Europe.

Not Even Really Blimps Anymore

Here's a fun twist: Goodyear's modern "blimps" aren't technically blimps at all. They're semi-rigid airships called Zeppelin NTs, which have an internal framework. True blimps are just pressurized envelopes with no rigid structure—think of them as flying balloons with gondolas.

The company switched to these semi-rigid airships in 2017 because they're more stable and efficient, but they kept calling them blimps because, well, that's what people know. Marketing beats technical accuracy every time.

The Golden Age Is Gone

In the 1930s, blimps and their larger cousins (dirigibles and zeppelins) were the future of air travel. The Hindenburg disaster in 1937 certainly didn't help their reputation, but the real killer was progress. Airplanes got faster, cheaper, and more practical. Helicopters could hover and land anywhere. Drones could capture aerial footage without a massive envelope of helium.

Today's blimps survive in a tiny niche: aerial advertising and sports coverage. They're slow enough to hover over a football stadium, distinctive enough to grab attention, and just nostalgic enough to make people look up and point.

So the next time you see a blimp, appreciate it. You're looking at one of maybe a dozen flying wonders still working in the modern world—a technological dinosaur that somehow survived extinction, if barely.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many blimps are there in the world?
Experts estimate there are approximately 25 blimps worldwide as of the early 2020s, with only about half actively in use. The exact number is impossible to verify as it depends on whether you count blimps in storage.
Why are there so few blimps left?
Blimps are slow, expensive to operate, and have limited cargo capacity. Modern aircraft, helicopters, and drones can perform the same tasks more efficiently and cost-effectively.
Does Goodyear still make blimps?
Goodyear operates 4 airships worldwide (3 in the U.S., 1 in Europe), but they're technically semi-rigid Zeppelin NT airships, not traditional blimps. The company switched to this design in 2017 for better stability and efficiency.
What are blimps used for today?
Modern blimps are primarily used for aerial advertising and sports event coverage. Their slow speed and ability to hover make them ideal for these specific applications.
What's the difference between a blimp and a zeppelin?
A blimp is a non-rigid airship with no internal framework—just a pressurized envelope. A zeppelin or dirigible has a rigid internal structure supporting the gas envelope, making it more stable and controllable.

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