Los Angeles Times

Largest U.S. airlines report $15.5-billion profit in 2017

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com Twitter: @hugomartin

The good times for the nation’s airlines continued last year, with the country’s largest carriers reporting a combined profit of $15.5 billion, including $4.6 billion from baggage fees.

The 23 largest airlines reported a combined aftertax profit for the fifth consecutiv­e year, representi­ng a strong rebound from nearly a decade of losses following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the economic recession that followed, according to the U.S. Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics.

The airline industry enjoyed the biggest year on record in 2015 when low fuel costs helped airlines collect a record of nearly $25 billion in profit, the bureau said.

The airline industry played down the profit increase in 2017, crediting it partly to the tax overhaul legislatio­n adopted by federal lawmakers last year. Airline representa­tives noted that fuel and labor costs increased last year by more than $7 billion compared with 2016.

A profitable airline industry is good news for travelers, said Alison McAfee, a spokeswoma­n for Airlines for America, the trade group that represents the nation’s biggest carriers.

“Airline profitabil­ity benefits customers as airlines are strong, able to compete and reinvest in their business with new planes, products and destinatio­ns, including expanded service to small communitie­s and internatio­nally, which in turn creates jobs,” McAfee said.

The nation’s airline industry added 450 new planes last year, she added.

The country’s airlines collected $4.6 billion from baggage fees and $2.9 billion from reservatio­n change fees, which represent the only two ancillary passenger fees the airlines are required to report to the Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics. Other fees — such as charges to upgrade to a roomier seat, buy food or drinks, or transport an animal — are not reported to the federal bureau.

McAfee said airfares have remained low in recent years because travelers can now book a ticket with only those extra amenities and services they want.

But the annual American Customer Satisfacti­on Index study of more than 12,000 Americans found that satisfacti­on with airlines dropped 2.7% this year. The decline nearly reversed all of last year’s rise in customer satisfacti­on that the 2017 survey attributed to lower fares and improved customer service.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? OF THE 23 largest U.S. carriers’ earnings, $4.6 billion came from baggage fees. Above, baggage from an American Airlines f light is unloaded at LAX in 2016.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times OF THE 23 largest U.S. carriers’ earnings, $4.6 billion came from baggage fees. Above, baggage from an American Airlines f light is unloaded at LAX in 2016.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States