KEY POINTS
  • Domestic airline bookings slipped 2.3% in May from April, the second consecutive month-over-month drop, according to Adobe data.
  • Airfares were up 30% last month compared with 2019 levels as travel costs continue to rise.
Travelers walk through Terminal A at Orlando International Airport on Christmas Day, Saturday, December 25, 2021.

U.S. airline bookings slipped 2.3% in May from a month earlier, the second consecutive monthly drop this year, while fares soared over 2019 levels, according to an Adobe report published Tuesday.

Consumers spent $8.3 billion on domestic tickets last month, up 6.2% from April.