Baltimore Sun

United adds US-Europe flights, bets travel boom

- By David Koenig

DALLAS — United Airlines plans to offer more flights across the Atlantic this summer than it did in 2019, a wager that internatio­nal travel will bounce back strongly despite the persistent pandemic.

United said Tuesday that it will boost trans-Atlantic passenger-carrying capacity by 25% over pre-pandemic levels to a combinatio­n of new destinatio­ns and old favorites such as London.

Patrick Quayle, the airline’s senior vice president of internatio­nal network, said it was the biggest single trans-Atlantic increase in United’s history. “We will be the largest carrier across the trans-Atlantic,” he said.

Later this week, United will begin serving several new destinatio­ns that it named last fall, including Portugal’s Azores and Spain’s Canary Islands.

Even before Tuesday’s announceme­nt, United had scheduled more passenger-carrying capacity to Europe in June and July than its closest rivals — 15% more than Delta Air Lines and 36% more than American Airlines, according to data from research firm Cirium. Each carrier also has European partner airlines.

United’s annual revenue from U.S.-Europe flights fell from $7.4 billion before the pandemic to $2.2 billion in 2020. It edged higher to $3.4 billion last year, or 14% of total revenue.

There is risk to United’s growth plans as internatio­nal flying has lagged the recovery in domestic travel. Airlines blame that largely on a U.S. requiremen­t that travelers test negative for COVID-19 within a day of boarding a U.S.-bound flight. Some Americans are unwilling to risk being stranded overseas for several extra days if they contract the virus during their trip.

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