Introducing Wingbits.Ai: The world’s first airspace intelligence platform

Wingbits

May 29, ‘26

For the past two years, we've been quietly building one of the most comprehensive independent flight tracking networks in the world: 6,000 antennas across 120 countries, generating terabytes of ADS-B data every day.

Spire Global and Korean Air R&D are already using it. Until now, turning that data into actionable insights often required substantial engineering effort, large-scale data infrastructure, and specialized analytical workflows.

Today, we're opening it up to everyone with a web connection.

Wingbits.ai lets you ask questions about airspace activity in plain language, and get real, live answers. No code to maintain, no complex data pipelines to build, and no massive datasets or infrastructure to manage on your end.

What you can do today

The underlying network is the same one our enterprise customers rely on, and the queries are as open-ended as the questions you actually have. A few things you can do right now:

  1. Ask where Air Force One is and get a live tracking link
  2. Query which private jets visited Davos last weekend, or which aircraft landed near Mar-a-Lago last Saturday
  3. Compare GPS jamming spikes across regions over time
  4. Monitor competitor routes
  5. Spin up your own custom agents that monitor the sky 24/7 for you and send alerts to Slack, email, Telegram, or Teams the moment something matches your criteria

Those agents run continuously in the background. A military aircraft entering a region you're watching, a specific tail number taking off, a GPS jamming event crossing a threshold. The agent keeps watching so you don't have to.

Who it's built for

Wingbits.ai is useful for anyone whose interests or work touches airspace, geopolitics, or competitive intelligence, and who has been blocked by the technical barrier of working with raw flight data.

  1. Charter brokers and private aviation professionals can monitor fleet activity, operator patterns, and airport traffic trends to better understand market demand and aircraft availability.
  2. Journalists and researchers can track movements of interest without needing to file data requests or reverse-engineer ADS-B feeds
  3. Prediction market traders can verify claims about military aircraft movements, official state/government travel, or logistical activity in near real time
  4. Route planners and aviation analysts can pull historical patterns and get scheduled summaries on the routes and operators they care about
  5. Aviation enthusiasts finally have a way to ask the nuanced questions that flight tracking apps don't surface

Why we built it this way

Our network was always designed to be independent and global, not a supplement to existing sources. Coverage across 120 countries means you're getting data from places where commercial tracking is sparse or unreliable, and the fresh feed means you're working with what's actually happening, not a delayed or filtered view.

The AI layer on top is the only practical way to give non-technical users access to a dataset this size and this complex. When a reporter needs to know which aircraft were operating in a specific corridor during a specific window, they shouldn't need an analyst to run that query. Now they can run it themselves, in seconds.

Get started

Head to wingbits.ai and start chatting and setting your own custom agents with a free trial. 

If you want to explore the API or MCP for deeper integrations, reach out to us directly.

Please note that Wingbits AIi is launching in beta and we're actively looking for feedback. If something doesn't work the way you'd expect, or you want to see something added, we want to hear it - support@wingbits.com or https://feedback.wingbits.com/

Circular wingbits logo with a gray and orange gradient background

Wingbits

Company

Wingbits is a DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network) that rewards community members with $WINGS tokens for monitoring aircraft in real-time using specialized ADS-B hardware. The network aligns incentives to compensate participants based on the quality and quantity of flight tracking data they contribute, creating a more equitable alternative to traditional tracking systems. By incentivizing strategic hardware placement and reliable uptime, Wingbits is building the world's largest and most secure flight tracking network while disrupting an industry that has relied on unpaid volunteers for decades.