The Star Malaysia - Star2

Scratching the travel itch

Americans want overseas summer vacations despite increase in costs and, crowds.

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LONG airport lines, jammed planes, higher fares and potential flight delays are set to plague the coming summer travel season in the United States as more Americans fly at home and abroad.

Even if the industry there avoids another meltdown like the one at Southwest Airlines over the year-end holiday period, a shortage of air-traffic controller­s at busy airports in the US means travellers aren’t likely to escape headaches that accompany flying during the busiest time of the year.

The number of passengers moving through airport checkpoint­s has surpassed 2.6 million recently, setting up the Memorial Day holiday in the US for passenger numbers “we haven’t seen since before the pandemic”, Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg told reporters.

US carriers operated 4.5% more flights this year over a seven-day stretch surroundin­g the May 29 holiday compared to a year ago, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion said, which is 2.6% below the pre-pandemic level in 2019. The three biggest US airlines said they flew 8.6 million people over the period, up nearly 12% from 2022.

Top global destinatio­ns for US travellers include London (England), Paris (France), Rome (Italy), Tokyo (Japan) and Cancun (Mexico), according to Hopper Incorporat­ed and Airlines Reporting, which handles settlement transactio­ns between carriers and travel agents.

United Airlines Holdings and Jetblue Airways are among carriers trimming about 10% of flying at busy airports in greater New York City and Washington at the request of federal regulators because of a shortage of air-traffic controller­s. Delays in New York have an outsized impact on the entire air system because so many flights start or end in the region.

“June through August is always a summer of discontent,” said Bob Mann, president of aviation consultant R.W. Mann & Co.

“It’s the highest utilisatio­n of people and equipment, and it’s the period of highest stress with the least margin for error.”

Holiday meltdown

Consumers will particular­ly be watching Southwest Airlines following its operationa­l crisis in December, when 16,700 flights were cancelled over 10 days after a massive winter storm overwhelme­d crew scheduling software and stranded flight crews and airplanes, along with more than two million passengers.

The Dallas-based carrier has updated technology and made other changes to better handle storms since the disruption, which triggered scrutiny from lawmakers and US regulators.

Summer demand is being fuelled by the expiration of pandemic travel restrictio­ns outside the US, consumer confidence despite inflation and threats of recession, and a continuing shift in spending not on goods but experience­s, according to Pricewater­housecoope­rs.

US airlines say they’re ready, after adding employees and increasing flight capacity. Nearly a quarter of flights were delayed each of the past two summers for nine major US carriers and their regional partners. That compares with just 19% in 2019, a year of record demand.

“Last summer was very much the summer of domestic travel,” Delta Air Lines chief executive officer Ed Bastian said on May 17. “This summer is internatio­nal, and it’s just about any place internatio­nally that people can get to, and it’s off the charts.”

About 58% of ticket booking searches originatin­g in the US have been for internatio­nal travel this year, according to booking app Hopper. That’s up four percentage points from 2022 but below the 63% in 2019. Tickets purchased for the 10 most popular internatio­nal destinatio­ns are up 26% on average, ARC data showed.

American Airlines Group is devoting 80% of its second-quarter year-over-year capacity growth to internatio­nal routes, while Delta is increasing seats on non-domestic routes by more than 20% compared with 2022.

United expects revenue in the period to increase almost 30% from internatio­nal flying versus as much as 10% from domestic.

“Internatio­nal travel, one of the big missing components in the leisure recovery, is a big driver this summer,” said Jonathan Kletzel, head of Pwc’s airline and travel practice.

That means elevated ticket prices. Internatio­nal fares to Europe this summer already are the highest in more than five years, according to Hopper. Fares to Europe are averaging US$1,167 (RM5,370) round trip, compared with US$850 (RM3,910) last year and US$861 (RM3,961) in 2019.

Trips to Asia are averaging $1,817 (RM8,360), higher than both the US$1,468 (RM6,754) average in 2022 and US$1,122 (RM5,162) in 2019, Hopper data shows.

“Internatio­nal is having that huge price run up that domestic saw last year,” when travel surged in the US after the omicron variant of Covid-19 waned, said Hayley Berg, Hopper’s lead economist.

More bargains can be found at home. Domestic round-trip fares for the summer are averaging US$306 (RM1,408), down 19% from last year as carriers offer more seats and flights and spend less for jet fuel. But it’s still well above the US$288 (RM1,325) average circa 2019, according to Hopper.

Prices are expected to be higher around the Fourth of July holiday but decline for the Sept 4 Labour Day holiday, the unofficial end to summer leisure trips in the US.

Half of Americans are planning a summer vacation with paid lodging, up from 46% last year, according to a Deloitte summer travel survey. Another 13% will stay with family or friends. About 37% will fly to internatio­nal destinatio­ns, up 10 percentage points over 2022. Comparison­s to 2019 aren’t available because the survey wasn’t done then.

Among those not planning to travel this year, 50% say they can’t afford it, the Deloitte survey showed. – Bloomberg

 ?? — Pexels ?? On average, flights from the us to popular asian destinatio­ns in the summer cost over rm8,000.
— Pexels On average, flights from the us to popular asian destinatio­ns in the summer cost over rm8,000.

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