Turning Seattle into an international gateway hub seems to have been a failed experiment for American Airlines.
The carrier filed plans over the weekend to cut its final international route from the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA), as first seen in Cirium schedules and later confirmed by an airline spokesperson.
Originally, American had planned to resume daily service from Seattle to London for the upcoming summer season, but that plan has now been scrapped. (American last operated service on this 4,801-mile route this summer.)
Want more airline-specific news? Sign up for TPG's free biweekly Aviation newsletter.
Instead, American will cede all Seattle-to-London flying to its Oneworld joint venture partner, British Airways, which offers up to two daily nonstops in the market.
American explained the cut with the following statement:
Service to London's Heathrow Airport (LHR) is slot-controlled, which means that airlines need "slots" for each arrival and departure. Slots at Heathrow are notoriously expensive and difficult to acquire, so American will add a second daily flight between Miami and London to use this slot from the abandoned Seattle route.
This second-daily flight from Miami will begin on April 1, 2024, and operate with the following schedule onboard a 273-seat Boeing 777-200ER.
Scrapping all international service from Seattle is a big blow to the carrier's strategy in the Pacific Northwest and the local Seattle market.
Just before the COVID-19 pandemic, American announced plans to shift some of its international focus from its hub in the incredibly competitive Los Angeles market to Seattle, where it hoped to establish a strategic presence in partnership with Alaska Airlines to boost international connectivity.
Alaska planned to provide domestic feed to fill American's new Seattle flights, which included routes to London, Shanghai and Bangalore, India.
Of course, the pandemic hit just weeks later, indefinitely suspending American's plans to launch service from Seattle to China and India.
The airline eventually inaugurated the London flight in March 2021, and it was flown pretty consistently through October 2023.
That said, the flight seemingly didn't perform as American had hoped.
That's likely due, in part, to macroeconomic challenges in the Seattle business market — buoyed by tech companies such as Amazon and Microsoft; it has faced challenging economic conditions, leading to tightened budgets, especially for travel.
Without international flights, it'll be interesting to see what happens to American's domestic connectivity in Seattle. Right now, the carrier offers service from there to Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia and Phoenix, Cirium
The website maxtravelz.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.
Turkish Airlines flies to 345 destinations in more different nations than any other carrier in the world, with one of the newest and most acclaimed airports as its hub. It also consistently ranks among the very best airlines and just won–again–Best Airline in Europe in the 2023 Skytrax World Airline Awards, the industry’s most influential, beating out the likes of Air France, Swiss, Lufthansa, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic. It also took home four other Number Ones in the awards, including Best Economy Class Seat in Europe and Best Business Class Cuisine worldwide. (I recently wrote in detail here at Forbes about another award-winning carrier, Qatar Airways, which has won World’s Best Airline and World’s Best Business Class among other titles).
Good morning, readers. I was off the clock when this broke Monday night, but among the latest short-term rental alliances to sue a big city is one in Dallas.
It’s about to get easier to escape from Salt Lake City to the gorgeous islands of Hawaii thanks to a new flight from Hawaiian Airlines set to launch next year.
If you’re looking for a budget-friendly flight down south—you’re in luck. Southwest Airlines has announced it will be expanding its international flight schedule by next summer—with new routes flying to Mexico, Costa Rica, Cayman Islands, Turks & Caicos, and more.
A vacationing family says American Airlines needs to pay up after their trip home from Jamaica became a headache when the air carrier canceled their flight.