KEY POINTS
  • Delta, United and American all posted a profit thanks to strong travel demand and high fares.
  • Flight disruptions are up compared with 2019, before Covid hamstrung travel.
  • The three biggest U.S. carriers are dialing back their flight growth ambitions.

In this article

An American Airlines Boeing 737-800, equipped with radar altimeters that may conflict with telecom 5G technology, can be seen flying 500 feet above the ground while on final approach to land at LaGuardia Airport in New York City, New York, U.S., January 6, 2022.

The leaders of the country's biggest airlines learned a hard lesson this summer: it's easier to make plans than to keep them.

The three biggest U.S. carriers — Delta, United and American — are dialing back their flight growth ambitions, an effort to fly more reliably after biting off more than they could chew this year as they chased an unprecedented rebound in travel, despite a host of logistical and supply chain constraints as well as staffing shortages.

In this article