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Home » Summer trip is not as easy as for airlines
Business & Money

Summer trip is not as easy as for airlines

Stacey D. WallsBy Stacey D. WallsAugust 15, 2025No Comments
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A passenger looks at planes at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia, July 2, 2025.

Charly Triballeau | AFP | Getty images

Earning money in summer is not as easy as before for airlines.

Airlines lowered their schedules in August for various reasons. Some travelers choose to fly earlier, in June or even in May, as schools have let escape earlier than before. The demand for theft to Europe also spent the suffocating summer and crowded in the fall, said airline leaders, especially for travelers with more flexibility, such as retirees.

Transporters always make most of their money in the second and third quarters. But as travel demand has changed and, in some cases, customers have become completely unpredictable, which makes the third trimester less than Shoo-in money for airlines.

Change of plans, more expensive tickets

Airline planners were forced to become more surgical with schedules in August while the recreational request is narrowed from the end of spring and summer summits. The workforce and other costs jumped after the pandemic, so it is essential to obtain the mixture of flights.

Transporters across industry have taken flights from the calendar after overhanging complexes too much capacity has pushed the prices this summer. But capacity reductions should increase the air rates, which increased by 0.7% in July compared to last year, and a 4% jump seasonally adjusted from June to July, according to the latest American inflation.

The interior capacity of the US Airlines is down 6% in August compared to July, according to the Cirium aeronautical data company. The same period of last year, they reduced the interior capacity by just over 4% compared to a drop of 0.6% between the months of 2023, said the Cirium. From July to August 2019, airlines reduced 1.7% of the capacity.

Transporters who bet on a successful year were disappointed earlier in 2025 when consumers weighed on President Donald Trump’s tariffs and economic uncertainty. To attract more customers, many airlines have reduced prices, even for summer flights, summer summits at the end of June and July.

The demand has improved, have declared the leaders of the airlines on profits in recent months, but the carriers, of which DeltaAmerican, United And Southwest Last month reduced his profits forecasts in 2025 compared to their sunny perspectives at the start of the year.

To complicate things, some travelers also waited until the last minute to book flights.

“It was really, I would say, in mid-May, when we started to see the reservations of the Memorial Day take,” JetBlue Airways President Marty St. George told investors last month. “We had a fantastic Memorial Day, much better than forecasts, and it really worn in June. But he has the feeling that people were waiting for a long time to make final decisions.”

Learn more CNBC Airline News

It is still next year

Now, some airlines are already thinking about how to tackle the constantly evolving travel models next year.

“Schools come back earlier and earlier, but what you see too is that schools are getting more and more”, Brian Znotins, American airlines“The Vice-President of Planning and the Calendar of the Networks told CNBC.

The public schools of Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas, returned on August 5 and the public schools of Atlanta resumed on August 4. In 2023, more than half of the country’s public school students returned to classrooms by mid-August, according to the Pew Research Center.

Southwest, with its Texas roots, ended its summer calendar on August 5 of this year, compared to August 15 in 2023. American, for its part, moves a flight peak next year.

“We move our whole change of summer schedule to the week before the Memorial Day,” said Znotins. “It’s just in response to schools in the spring.” These plans include adding a multitude of long-haul international flights.

“We are an airline all year round,” he continued. Znotins said that the carrier must not only make sure that there are enough seats for advanced periods, but knowing when reducing lighter neighborhoods, like the first three months of the year.

“For a network planner, the most difficult schedules to build are those where there is a lower demand because you cannot simply count on the upcoming demand for your flights,” said Znotins. “When the demand is lower, you must find ways to attract customers to your flights with a good quality calendar and product changes.”

American said that his seats calendar in August was tied with July 2019, but that this year, he was 6% lower in August from July.

The American forecasts last month, it could lose 10 cents adjusted to 60 cents per share in the third quarter, below what analysts expect. The CEO Robert Isom said in a call for results that “July was difficult”, although the carrier says that trends have improved.

The capacity cuts, associated with recently more encouraging booking models, feed optimism concerning a better balance of supply and demand in the coming weeks.

“The error that some airlines make, you tend to try to build a church for Easter Sunday: you build your capacity foundation for these peak periods and then you have too much [employees]”Said Raymond James Airline Savanthi Syth analyst.

She said it was unusual to see airlines at all levels pruned their summer schedules even before the end of the peak period, but it is optimistic about demand and prices in the future.

“Time has passed and people get a little more certainty about what their future looks like and they are more willing to spend,” she said.

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Airlines easy Summer trip
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Stacey D. Walls

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