USA TODAY International Edition

Shop now for your summer flights

Airfares are likely to rise along with the demand

- Dawn Gilbertson

U. S. airline executives are the most optimistic they’ve been since the coronaviru­s pandemic began thanks to an unfolding travel rebound fueled by vaccinatio­n rates, COVID- 19 case trends and the easing of travel restrictio­ns.

“I’m relieved. I’m optimistic. I’m enthused. I’m grateful,” Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly gushed on the airline’s earnings conference call Thursday.

“We’re starting to see light at the end of this very dark tunnel,” American Airlines CEO Doug Parker told investors.

“My, what a difference a year makes,” United CEO Scott Kirby said on Tuesday.

The spike in travel demand, which began in March and shows few signs of slowing down as the summer travel season looms, is welcome news for the battered industry. Southwest alone lost $ 1 billion in the first three months of the year.

The spike in travel demand, which began in March and shows few signs of slowing down, is welcome news for the battered airline industry.

But it comes with a price for travelers: higher ticket prices. Passengers who haven’t flown since the pandemic and expect to find the bargain fares they read about over the past year are likely to be disappoint­ed, especially on popular routes and during peak travel periods like holiday weekends.

Airlines that were dangling cheap fares to help fill planes during the pandemic suddenly find themselves able to boost fares as short- and longer- term bookings increase at a good clip. Delta’s bookings in March were twice the level of January. Southwest’s early reservatio­ns for summer travel are so strong the airline will operate nearly as many June flights as it did in 2019. And American said its daily net bookings this week reached 2019 levels without the benefit of much internatio­nal or business travel.

In earnings calls with investors over the past week as they reported quarterly results, airline executives weren’t shy about discussing the newfound leverage they have to raise ticket prices thanks to pent- up demand for trips within the United States and to close internatio­nal vacation spots like Mexico and the Caribbean.

Alaska Airlines’ average fares for peak summer flights booked to date are higher than 2019, according to Andrew Harrison, the airline’s chief commercial officer.

“I think you’re going to see a sure but

stable climb,” he said.

Vasu Raja, chief revenue officer for American Airlines, said booked ticket prices at the beginning of the year were about half of 2019 levels.

As the airline looks out to early summer bookings, he said, the figure is up to 90%.

American, he said, is doing “all we can” to boost average fares per passenger, or yields as they are known in industry lingo.

It’s a matter of supply and demand, Raja and others said.

“We’re seeing a lot of cases, especially on peak holidays and things like that, where frankly, demand for seats is greater than the supply of seats,” Raja said.

United Airlines also is managing fares more than it did during the pandemic and likes the trends it’s seeing, according to Andrew Nocella, United’s chief commercial officer. Average fares paid for mid- June domestic leisure trips so far are up from June 2019.

“We still have a long way to go, and this summer is still quite a way off,” Nocella said. “I’m really actually quite bullish that we’ve turned the corner on that.”

The bottom line for travelers: Start shopping for tickets now or risk higher prices or a less- than- desirable flight itinerary.

There will still be pockets of deals, of course, especially on routes with intense competitio­n and especially from budget carriers. Allegiant and Frontier were touting $ 29 fares via email promotions on Thursday.

Deals could become widespread if there is another surge in coronaviru­s cases or if the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other government entities announce travel restrictio­ns, which could hurt travel demand. Bookings to Mexico took a hit in January after the CDC said it would require travelers on internatio­nal flights to the United States to show proof of a negative COVID- 19 test or recovery from the virus to board.

The U. S. State Department this month raised its alert level on dozens of foreign countries, including Mexico, to “do not travel” status, but Southwest and American executives said Thursday that they have not yet seen any impact on bookings.

Another unknown as summer approaches: whether airlines get giddy and add too many flights. That would shift the equation back in travelers’ favor. Already, two new airlines, Avelo and Breeze, are set to debut.

“We’re very well aware that it will still be messy and that we’ll have to carefully manage,” Kelly said.

How to save money on plane tickets this summer

● Don’t dawdle, especially if your travel dates and destinatio­n are set. Last- minute deals were prevalent early in the pandemic because so few people, especially the business travelers who buy pricey last- minute tickets, were traveling. But airlines say traditiona­l booking patterns are returning, so they know where demand is strong and are back to holding back some seats in hopes of a last- minute premium. As with holiday season travel, if you see a fare that’s palatable, grab it.

● Be flexible with your destinatio­n and dates if your only goal is to go somewhere this summer. United just added a new feature where you put in your home airport and dates and a map pops up with flight prices. Google Flights also has a popular map feature.

● Travel on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Budget carrier Spirit said it is more likely to offer deals on those dates to fill planes this summer than weekends when demand is already strong.

● Postpone your trip until late summer or early fall. It’s a slower period for vacation travel, and if business travel doesn’t bounce back significantly, airlines will have to lower fares to lure vacationer­s in the lull before the busy Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas travel season.

 ?? ETHAN MILLER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? People, some wearing masks, walk through a concourse at McCarran Internatio­nal Airport in Las Vegas in March 2020 as the coronaviru­s continued to spread across the United States.
ETHAN MILLER/ GETTY IMAGES People, some wearing masks, walk through a concourse at McCarran Internatio­nal Airport in Las Vegas in March 2020 as the coronaviru­s continued to spread across the United States.

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